Death toll of Indonesia’s quakes, tsunami climbs to 1,407
The death toll of Indonesia's quakes and tsunami jumped to 1,407 on
Wednesday, according to the spokesman of national disaster management
agency Sutopo Purwo Nugroho.
Indonesia has been hit with several earthquakes in the past few days
with the latest being a strong earthquake, with a magnitude of 6.1 on
the Richter Scale, in the Sumba region Tuesday morning, the Malaysian
Meteorological Department meanwhile had reported.
Last Friday, earthquakes hit its central Sulawesi region which also
triggered a tsunami and brought a high number of fatalities and
destruction to the Indonesian islands. Help both local and international
have since arrived at the affected areas.- Bernama Death toll of Indonesia's quakes, tsunami climbs to 1,407
JAKARTA -- The death toll from Indonesia's multiple earthquakes and
an ensuing tsunami jumped to 1,407 on Wednesday, the country's disaster
management agency said.
Most of the dead were recovered in Palu, the provincial capital of Central Sulawesi province.
The search and rescue operations were underway with more rescuers and
equipment joining in the mission, spokesman of the national disaster
management agency Sutopo Purwo Nugroho said.
Soldiers, police, government personnel and volunteers flocked in the
catastrophe-rattled areas to join a total of 6,399 rescuers already in
the scene, and were rushing to retrieve victims under the ruins, he
said.
The quakes that triggered a tsunami destroyed 2,403 houses, according
to a satellite image, while a total of 362 aftershocks with 12 of them
felt occurred after the main shock, said Sutopo.The natural disaster forced a total of 70,821 people to flee their
homes and take shelter in camps or under tarpaulins in 141 spots. So
far, not all of the basic needs has been provided, he said.
The spokesman also said the country's tsunami warning systems needed urgent repair.Indonesia had installed a series of tsunami warning systems across
the archipelagic country, home to over 17,500 islands. But since 2012,
the devices have not been functioning, and many of them were vandalized
or stolen, said the spokesman.