REUTERS - The death toll from
a strong earthquake that hit northern Indonesia's Aceh province on Wednesday
has doubled to at least 50, Indonesia's disaster agency said, as
rescuers searched dozens of collapsed buildings for trapped survivors.
rescuers searched dozens of collapsed buildings for trapped survivors.
Search and rescue
teams used earth movers to clear rubble and reach what authorities believed
were dozens of victims trapped after the magnitude 6.5 quake.
Sutopo Nugroho of
the national disaster management agency said a state of emergency had been
declared in Aceh, which sits on the northern tip of Indonesia's Sumatra island.
"We are now
focusing on searching for victims and possible survivors," Nugroho said.
President Joko
Widodo said he had instructed his chief of staff to visit the disaster area.
Aceh was devastated
by a massive earthquake and tsunami centered on its western coast near the
provincial capital, Banda Aceh, on Dec. 26, 2004.
Wednesday's quake
hit the east coast of the province, about 170 km (105 miles) from Banda Aceh.
Nugroho said Aceh's Pidie Jaya regency, with a population of about 140,000,
bore the brunt of the damage.
"Many of the
victims were killed or injured not because of the quake itself but because of
collapsing buildings," he said.
Volunteer teams
brought injured residents to local hospitals, filling most to capacity. Many of
those treated in hospital corridors and hastily erected disaster tents had
suffered broken bones and scratches, a Reuters witness said.
Images on television
and social media showed victims being rushed to hospital, flattened buildings
and fallen electricity poles, and people gathering outside at street corners.
Dozens of residents
remain missing, according to Khairul Nova, an official at the Aceh search and
rescue agency.
An Indonesian Red
Crescent volunteer described scenes of heavy damage and said many people had
been injured. "There isn't enough medical staff around," the Red
Crescent's Muklis, who like many Indonesians uses one name, told TVOne.
The United States
Geological Survey said the quake struck just after 5 a.m. local time (2200 GMT
Tuesday) at a depth of 17 km (11 miles). No tsunami warning was issued.
At least five
aftershocks were felt in the hours after the initial quake, the disaster
management agency said.
The region suffered
massive destruction in 2004 when a 9.2 magnitude quake triggered a tsunami that
wiped out entire communities in Indonesia and other countries around the Indian
Ocean. Indonesia was the hardest hit, with more than 120,000 people killed in
Aceh alone.
REUTERS
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