Guernsey Press

Indonesian rescuers focus on landslide site as quake toll rises

At least 272 people have died – more than a third of them children – after Monday’s magnitude 5.6 tremor.

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Indonesian rescuers have narrowed their focus to the site of a landslide where dozens of people were believed trapped after an earthquake killed at least 272, more than a third of them children.

Many of the more than 1,000 rescuers were using diggers and sniffer dogs as well as their bare hands to search the worst-hit area of Cijendil village in the mountainous Cianjur district, where a landslide set off by Monday’s quake left tonnes of debris in the form of mud, rocks and splintered trees.

National Disaster Mitigation Agency chief Suharyanto said the rescuers are planning to use more heavy equipment to search the landslide after using maximum human power.

Indonesia Earthquake
A rescuer searches the rubble in Cianjur, West Java (AP)

Rescue efforts were temporarily suspended Wednesday as heavy monsoon rains fell.

Indonesian President Joko Widodo visited Cianjur on Thursday and said rescuers will focus on one location where 39 people are missing.

Indonesia Earthquake
People look for usable items from their home after it was destroyed in the quake (AP)

He said distribution of relief supplies has been difficult because the injured and displaced are spread out and hard to reach.

Henri Alfiandi, chief of the National Search and Rescue Agency said: “We hope all victims can be found soon.”

Quake damage
The quake has left hundreds dead (AP)

Data from National Disaster Mitigation Agency showed that 100 of the 272 confirmed deaths were children.

Monday’s magnitude 5.6 quake injured more than 2,000 people, damaged at least 56,000 houses and displaced at least 62,000 people to evacuation centers and other shelters. The agency said 171 public facilities were destroyed, including 31 schools.

President Widodo has pledged to rebuild infrastructure and provide assistance of up to 50 million rupiah (£2,658) to each resident whose house was damaged.

Indonesia is frequently struck by earthquakes, volcanic eruptions and tsunamis because of its location on the arc of volcanoes and fault lines in the Pacific Basin known as the Ring of Fire.

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