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Indonesia quake toll jumps to 164, survivors wait for aid
By Kiki Siregar
Mataram (West Nusa Tenggara), Indonesia (AFP) Aug 9, 2018

'Why are they leaving me?' Indonesian abandoned in quake chaos
Mataram (West Nusa Tenggara), Indonesia (AFP) Aug 8, 2018 - Lying in agony with a broken leg at the entrance to a mosque in Lombok, Alimuddin screamed for help as a powerful earthquake brought down the building around him on Sunday.

"I tried to move my leg, lift it up, and that's when I realised it was broken," the 49-year-old, who goes by one name, told AFP from a stretcher outside a hospital in Mataram.

It was only by chance that another congregant heard his desperate pleas for help and dragged him from the place of worship.

Alimuddin soon found himself at a nearby hospital, where overstretched medical staff fled his bedside after an aftershock triggered fears of a tsunami.

"I thought 'Why are they leaving me behind?' But I couldn't blame them because they were trying to save themselves," he said.

The medical staff later returned, only to abandon him again because another patient with a bleeding head wound needed urgent attention.

Alimuddin's ordeal underlines the chaotic scenes across Lombok, a volcanic island to the east of Bali, after the shallow 6.9-magnitude quake struck Sunday evening.

It killed at least 131 people and damaged tens of thousands of buildings, just a week after another tremor in the holiday island killed 17 people.

Hundreds of bloodied and bandaged victims like Alimuddin are being treated outside damaged hospitals in the main city of Mataram and other hard-hit areas. More than 156,000 people were displaced by the quake.

Local authorities, international NGOs and the central government have begun organising aid, but shattered roads have slowed efforts to reach survivors in the mountainous north and east of Lombok, which was hardest hit.

There is a dire need for medical staff, food and medicine in the worst-hit areas, according to Muhammad Zainul Majdi, the governor of West Nusa Tenggara province which covers Lombok.

"We have limited human resources. Some paramedics have to be at the shelters, some need to be mobile," Majdi told AFP.

The Indonesian Red Cross said it had set up 10 mobile clinics in the north of the island and field hospitals have been established in other areas.

But even in the main city of Mataram, the injured are staying in non-sterile environments and facing long delays for treatment.

Alimuddin was forced to spend the night in a hospital parking lot before he was finally operated on.

His wife Maria Ulfa, who stood vigil, was exasperated by the delay -- but Alimuddin was taking a more philosophical view.

"Ultimately I surrender myself to God. This is what we call a calamity and we can't prevent it," he said.

The devastating earthquake on the Indonesian island of Lombok was "exceptionally destructive" and wiped out entire villages in the worst-hit regions, relief agencies warned as the death toll jumped to more than 160 on Thursday.

Relief efforts have yet to reach parts of the island four days after the quake hit, Indonesian authorities said, as hopes fade of finding further survivors among the wreckage.

"There are still some evacuees that have not yet been touched by aid, especially in North Lombok and West Lombok," national disaster agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho tweeted Thursday.

A total of 164 people were now confirmed dead in the quake, Nugroho told AFP, with a further 1,400 seriously injured and more than 150,000 displaced.

Local authorities, international relief groups and the central government have begun organising aid, but shattered roads have slowed efforts to reach survivors in the mountainous north of Lombok, which bore the brunt of the quake.

"We are still waiting for assessments from some of the more remote areas in the north of the island, but it is already clear that Sunday's earthquake was exceptionally destructive," Christopher Rassi, the head of a Red Cross assessment team on Lombok, said in a statement.

"I visited villages yesterday that were completely collapsed."

Tens of thousands of homes, businesses and mosques were levelled by the quake, which struck on Sunday as evening prayers were being said across the Muslim-majority island.

There are fears that two collapsed mosques in north Lombok had been filled with worshippers.

Rescuers have found three bodies and also managed to pull one man alive from the twisted wreckage of one mosque in Lading Lading village, while at least one body has been spotted under the rubble in Pemenang.

Authorities are gathering information from family members with missing relatives to determine how many more people may have been in the buildings when they collapsed, national search and rescue agency spokesman Yusuf Latif told AFP.

- Waiting for aid -

Across much of the island, a popular tourist destination, once-bustling villages have been turned into virtual ghost towns.

Many frightened villagers are staying under tents or tarpaulins dotted along roads or in parched rice fields, and makeshift medical facilities have been set up to treat the injured.

Evacuees in some encampments say they are running out of food, while others are suffering psychological trauma after the powerful quake, which struck just one week after another tremor surged through the island and killed 17.

There is a dire need for medical staff and "long-term aid", especially food and medicine in the worst-hit areas, government officials said.

Some evacuees have complained of being ignored or experiencing long delays for supplies to arrive at shelters.

"There has been no help at all here," said 36-year-old Multazam, staying with hundreds of others under tarpaulins on a dry paddy field outside West Pemenang village.

"We have no clean water, so if we want to go to the toilet we use a small river nearby," he said, adding they needed food, bedding and medicine.

The Indonesian Red Cross said it had set up 10 mobile clinics in the north of the island.

A field hospital has also been established near an evacuation centre catering to more than 500 people in the village of Tanjung.

Kurniawan Eko Wibowo, a doctor at the field hospital, said most patients had broken bones and head injuries.

"We lack the infrastructure to perform operations because (they) need to be performed in a sterile place," Wibowo told AFP.

Aid groups say children are particularly vulnerable, with many sleeping in open fields and suffering illnesses from lack of warm clothing and blankets.


Related Links
Bringing Order To A World Of Disasters
When the Earth Quakes
A world of storm and tempest


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SHAKE AND BLOW
More than 70,000 homeless after deadly Lombok quake
Mataram, Indonesia (AFP) Aug 8, 2018
More than 70,000 people have been left homeless in the deadly earthquake that hit Lombok island, forced to sleep in makeshift shelters and lacking food, medicine and clean water, authorities said Wednesday. The shallow 6.9-magnitude quake killed at least 105 people and triggered panic among locals and tourists on Lombok on Sunday, just a week after another tremor surged through the holiday island and killed 17. Some 236 people have been severely injured in the latest quake, with tens of thousand ... read more

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