October 1, 2009 7:52 PM

Deadly Indonesia Quake Traps Thousands

By
CBSNews
(AP)  Updated 10:28 p.m. EDT

A disaster management official says at least 200 people have been killed by the powerful earthquake that struck western Indonesia.

Priyadi Kardono, a spokesman for the National Disaster Management Agency, says the deaths were counted in the coastal Sumatran city of Padang, following Wednesday's 7.6 magnitude quake.

A higher death toll is expected once officials tally casualties in other areas of West Sumatra province where communications and roads have been severed.

The U.S. Geological Survey said another powerful earthquake struck western Indonesia at 8:52 a.m. local time Thursday on Sumatra Island, about 180 miles away from the more powerful quake Wednesday. There were no immediate reports of damage from the 6.9 magnitude quake.

Kardono said Thursday that about 500 buildings collapsed in Padang - a sprawling regional capital of 900,000 people.

Buildings swayed hundreds of miles away in neighboring Malaysia and Singapore.

In the sprawling low-lying city of Padang, the shaking was so intense that people crouched or sat on the street to avoid falling. Children screamed as an exodus of thousands tried to get away from the coast in cars and motorbikes, honking horns.

Authorities say untold numbers of houses, hotels, schools and shops have crumbled to the ground, reports CBS News correspondent Celia Hatton.

"What we're hearing from Padang is sporadic," Sean Granville-Ross of Mercy Corps told Hatton. "It's difficult, communications are down. What we have heard is this was a huge earthquake and there has been significant damage. There are obviously large numbers dead and injured, and we're expecting those to increase as daylight breaks."

The magnitude 7.6 quake hit at 5:15 p.m., just off the coast of Padang, the U.S. Geological Survey reported. It occurred a day after a killer tsunami hit islands in the South Pacific and was along the same fault line that spawned the 2004 Asian tsunami that killed 230,000 people in 11 nations.

A tsunami warning was issued Wednesday for countries along the Indian Ocean, but was lifted after about an hour; there were no reports of giant waves.

The temblor flattened buildings and felled trees in Padang, damaged mosques and hotels and crushed cars. A foot could be seen sticking out from one pile of rubble. In the gathering darkness shortly after the quake, residents fought some fires with buckets of water and used their bare hands to search for survivors, pulling at the wreckage and tossing it away piece by piece.

"People ran to high ground. Houses and buildings were badly damaged," said Kasmiati, who lives on the coast near the quake's epicenter.

"I was outside, so I am safe, but my children at home were injured," she said before her cell phone went dead. Like many Indonesians, she uses one name.

The loss of telephone service deepened the worries of those outside the stricken area.

"I want to know what happened to my sister and her husband," said Fitra Jaya, who owns a house in downtown Padang and was in Jakarta when the quake hit. "I tried to call my family there, but I could not reach anyone at all."

Initial reports received by the government said 75 people were killed, but the real number is "definitely higher," Vice President Jusuf Kalla told reporters in the capital, Jakarta. "It's hard to tell because there is heavy rain and a blackout," he said.

Health Minister Siti Fadilah Supari told MetroTV that two hospitals and a mall collapsed in Padang.

"This is a high-scale disaster, more powerful than the earthquake in Yogyakarta in 2006 when more than 3,000 people died," Supari said, referring to a major city on the main Indonesian island of Java.

Hospitals struggled to treat the injured as their relatives hovered nearby.

Indonesia's government announced $10 million in emergency response aid and medical teams and military planes were being dispatched to set up field hospitals and distribute tents, medicine and food rations. Members of the Cabinet were preparing for the possibility of thousands of deaths.

(CBS)
"There will be challenges primarily to get aid into the city," Granville-Ross told Hatton. "We'll have to look at air, land. The other neighboring provinces are 10 hours by road."

Rustam Pakaya, head of the Health Ministry's crisis center, said "thousands of people are trapped under the collapsed houses."

"Many buildings are badly damaged, including hotels and mosques," said Wandono, an official at the Meteorology and Geophysics Agency in Jakarta, citing reports from residents.

Kalla said the worst-affected area was Pariaman, a coastal town about 40 miles northwest of Padang. He gave no details on destruction or deaths there.

Local television reported more than two dozen landslides. Some blocked roads, causing miles-long traffic jams of cars and trucks.

On Tuesday, a powerful earthquake off the South Pacific islands of Samoa, American Samoa and Tonga - thousands of miles (kilometers) from Indonesia - spawned tsunami that killed more than 100 people. Experts said the seismic events were not related.

View photos of the tsunami aftermath in Samoa

Both Indonesia's Aceh province, which was devastated in the 2004 tsunami with 130,000 dead, and Padang lie along the same fault. It runs the along the west coast of Sumatra and is the meeting point of the Eurasian and Pacific tectonic plates, which have been pushing against each other for millions of years, causing huge stress to build up.

Scientists have long suggested Padang would suffer a similar fate to Aceh in the coming decades. Some predictions said 60,000 people would be killed - mostly by giant waves generated by an undersea quake.

The dire predictions spread alarm across Padang, which was struck by an earthquake in 2007 that killed dozens of people.

Indonesia, a vast archipelago with more than 17,000 islands and a population of 235 million, straddles continental plates and is prone to seismic activity along what is known as the Pacific Ring of Fire.



AP
Add a Comment See all 17 Comments
by Drock3453 October 25, 2009 10:21 PM EDT
Hey Global warming doesn't exists and its not bush's or the republicans fault. I love how the only thing democrats do is argue about everything that is wrong with the world. The earth has constantly been warming up and cooling down. Al Gore proved he is wrong with the stupid movie he made. Look up stossel's video on global warming if none of you believe me.
Reply to this comment
by MikeHydroSoils September 30, 2009 6:53 PM EDT
We have been saying for weeks there was increasing activity, recorded on south Pacific west mainly, in Earth Tremors as published so meticulously by USGS, with thanks to their geophysicists.
Mike Stagg hydrology soils
Reply to this comment
by arbzzz September 30, 2009 12:57 PM EDT
You know what - the Indonesians hate us, they kill westerners with bombs at their resorts - who cares if they die. A few less militant moslems to attack the rest of the world
Reply to this comment
by Ichabod09 September 30, 2009 7:09 PM EDT
arbzz,

these indonesians, are they the ones involve in child prostitution and the human slave traffic?
by brianbwb-2009 September 30, 2009 11:27 AM EDT
Tectonic shifting, which has been going on ever since the super-continent of Pangea broke up a few billion years ago. Nothing more.

Shift happens.
Reply to this comment
by brianbwb-2009 September 30, 2009 11:27 AM EDT
Tectonic shifting, which has been going on ever since the super-continent of Pangea broke up a few billion years ago. Nothing more.

Shift happens.
Reply to this comment
by bajajohn1 October 1, 2009 1:27 AM EDT
Whose fault was it?
by lloydbest1 October 1, 2009 1:40 PM EDT
You're not too far off. Did you feel anything in your neck of the woods?
by stuart-johns1 September 30, 2009 11:11 AM EDT
by mary-miami September 30, 2009 10:56 AM EDT

I agree with the global warming deal. But global warming, or climate change (there both the same to me) and earthquakes have been happening on this earth since the beginning of time.

To equate this with God's judgement is kinda reaching a bit. Don't you think?
Reply to this comment
by mary-miami September 30, 2009 10:56 AM EDT
An earthquake an a tsunami within days of each other...I believe this is proof that global warming is taking place. The atmosphere is messed up...In Miami, the heat was so high this summer that it was intolerable to walk outside for very long, and in the colder states, it will probably be extra "frozen"...Temperatures are going into extremes. I am not saying that the planet won't last much longer, but it certainly is showing signs of "illness".
Reply to this comment
by docpeter1953 September 30, 2009 4:22 PM EDT
UH, think for yourself for a minute.

The Tsunami was caused by an earthquake. it didn't just happen all by itself.

So you actually have two earthquakes.
by r1060b September 30, 2009 7:57 PM EDT
What????? Global warming has to do with a gradual increase in the average temperature of the ATMOSPHERE!!!! It has NOTHING to do with earthquakes or tsunami. Earthquakes are caused by the movement of the crust of the earth, not the atmosphere, and the tsunami are caused by the earthquakes so they are related, but not "days later".
by HenryDorsettCase September 30, 2009 10:16 AM EDT
No, not the apocalypse, not an angry God, just the same crustal shifting as occurs each Spring and Fall when the sun's primary gravitational pull shifts from the northern to southern hemispheres. However two quakes on one side of the Pacific plate will cause greater stress on this side of that same plate. Expect either a series of small quakes or a single large quake in S. America, Mexico or Western U.S. within about two weeks. That quake or quakes will relieve the pressure on the Pacific plate from this most recent series of quakes in the South Pacific. Geological science guys. Just do a little research and have some knowledge before you attribute natural Earth events as "an angry God".
Reply to this comment
by bajajohn1 October 1, 2009 1:25 AM EDT
Blame Bush and the Republicans, Die Quick, health plan.
by parisdakar September 30, 2009 9:25 AM EDT
Laugh if you will. This is the start of the apocalype. God is angry.
Reply to this comment
by stuart-johns1 September 30, 2009 8:44 AM EDT
Oh oh. I can hear the footsteps of the Armageddon is coming republicans.
Reply to this comment
by Ichabod09 September 30, 2009 7:06 PM EDT
Naw stuart,
they're just coming after the preverts that use multiple IDs
and rant bout "religion is poison" and "great post dude"
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