Quake toll reaches 268
INDONESIAN rescuers used jackhammers, circular saws and sometimes their bare hands on Tuesday to move the rubble of flattened buildings as they searched for victims and survivors after an earthquake killed at least 268 people. With many missing, some remote areas still unreachable, and more than 1,000 people injured in the 5.6 magnitude quake, the death toll is likely to rise.
Hospitals near the epicentre on the densely populated island of Java were already overwhelmed, and patients hooked up to IV drips lay on stretchers and cots in tents set up outside, awaiting further treatment.
Indonesia is frequently hit by earthquakes, many much stronger than Monday’s whose magnitude would typically be expected to cause light damage. But experts said the shallowness of the quake and inadequate infrastructure contributed to the severe damage, including caved-in roofs and large piles of bricks, concrete, and corrugated metal.
The quake was centred on the rural, mountainous Cianjur district, where one woman said her home started “shaking like it was dancing”.
“I was crying and immediately grabbed my husband and children,” said Partinem, who like many Indonesians goes by only one name. The house collapsed shortly after she escaped with her family.
“If I didn’t pull them out, we might have also been victims,” she said, gazing over the pile of broken concrete and timber. More than 2.5 million people live in Cianjur district, including about 175,000 in the main town of the same name.
The quake struck at a depth of 6.2 miles (10km) and also caused panic in the capital, Jakarta, about a three hour-drive away, where high-rise buildings swayed and some people fled their homes. National Disaster Mitigation Agency head Suharyanto, who uses one name, told reporters that 1,083 people were injured and at least 151 missing. However, not all of the dead have been identified, so it is possible that some of the bodies pulled from the rubble are people on the missing list. Rescue operations were focused on about a dozen locations in Cianjur, where people are still believed trapped, said public works and housing spokesman Endra Atmawidjaja.
“We are racing against time to rescue people,” he added. Initial rescue attempts were hampered by damaged roads and bridges and power outages, and a lack of equipment to help move the heavy rubble.
By Tuesday, power supplies and phone communications had begun to improve, and Atmawidjaja said seven excavators and 10 trucks had been deployed from neighbouring areas to clear roads.