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Indonesia quake toll climbs, areas declared mass graves

An Indonesian man (upper C) searches for belongings at his damaged house in the Sumatran city of Padang on October 7, 2009. Fresh international earthquake aid flowed into Indonesia as schools and shops re-opened amid the stench of death from bodies still trapped beneath the rubble after the 7.6 magnitude quake on September 30. Photo courtesy AFP

Flash floods hit Indonesia: police
Flash floods inundated hundreds of houses in Indonesia's Central Sulawesi province Thursday but there were no reports of casualties, a policeman said. Powerful waters were unleashed after the Tuwele river overflowed and smashed through about 500 houses in Tolitoli, policeman Asnan Mokodompis told AFP. "Our rescue teams are still checking whether there are casualties in the flooding," he said, adding that about 1,500 people had been forced to leave their homes. Floods and landslides are common in Indonesia, which is densely populated and prone to frequent heavy rains. Activists have warned that logging and a failure to reforest denuded land in the world's fourth-most populous country are often to blame.
by Staff Writers
Padang, Indonesia (AFP) Oct 8, 2009
Mass graves were designated in Indonesia on Thursday as villagers gave up hope of finding loved ones buried alive in landslides triggered by last week's 7.6-magnitude earthquake.

In Malalak, about 120 kilometres (75 miles) north of Padang, West Sumatra, grieving villagers, religious leaders and officials agreed to stop looking for 40 people buried in landslides and declare the areas mass graves.

"There were 30 bodies retrieved from the landslide while another 40 people were still buried under the rubble and mud," West Sumatra military chief Colonel Mulyono said.

More than 210 bodies are believed to be interred beneath massive landslides that obliterated three villages in Padang Pariaman district, about 20 kilometres northwest of Padang, he said.

Another 144 bodies have already been retrieved from the area and the search operation there was continuing as relatives had not agreed to declare the area a mass grave.

"As there's no agreement yet to stop the search operation, so the rescuers from the military will continue to work with maximum effort," Mulyono said.

The official toll from the September 30 quake climbed by 35 to 739, according to the Indonesian disaster management agency.

The Red Cross, which believes the toll will eventually reach more than 3,000 once all the dead and missing are counted, increased its aid appeal to 18.5 million dollars to help about 100,000 people especially in villages.

At the collapsed Ambacang hotel in central Padang, 41 people were confirmed to have died and 34 bodies were still buried under the rubble, out of 192 people registered in the hotel when the quake struck, Mulyono said.

Provincial official Dody Ruswandi said it would take up to two weeks to finish demolishing and clearing the collapsed buildings from the city.

Aid was flowing into Padang and out into surrounding villages as work began to clear the rubble of collapsed buildings from the city of a million people.

"We are especially concerned about getting aid to remote villages," said Bob McKerrow, head of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies' (IFRC) office in Indonesia.

Villagers were reportedly blocking roads to stop relief trucks, following disruptions in normal deliveries to commercial markets in rural areas, the federation added in a statement.

Three US warships were expected to arrive off the Sumatran coast in the next two days, bringing vital helicopters to assist in the relief effort in areas that have been cut off by landslides and broken roads, a US official said.

A US military field hospital with the capacity to treat up to 400 people was in operation in Padang, but a transport plane with 45 tonnes of supplies had been delayed for a second day and would arrive on Friday.

The IFRC said it had revised its preliminary emergency appeal upwards from 6.6 million dollars to 18.5 million dollars to assist 100,000 survivors.

The relief operation was focusing on temporary shelter, restoring clean water supplies and medical care, it said.

About 500,000 people are estimated to have been made homeless and 800,000 are believed to have been affected by the earthquake.

The Danish government also said it would give an extra 10 million kroner (1.9 million dollars), bringing Denmark's total contribution to 12.4 million kroner, Development Minister Ulla Toernaes said in a statement.

"If we did not respond quickly, the disaster could be much worse," Toernaes said.

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