Indonesia quake kids traumatised as rescuers race against clock

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PALU, Indonesia, Oct 4, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Many children have been separated
from their families and are “in shock and traumatised” following Indonesia’s
devastating quake-tsunami, aid workers said Thursday, as much-needed supplies
trickled in to shattered communities.

A total of 1,411 people have been confirmed dead and over 2,500 injured
after the monster earthquake struck Friday sending destructive waves
barrelling into Sulawesi island.

The disaster reduced buildings in the seaside city of Palu to rubble but,
with transport links badly affected, aid has been slow to arrive and looting
has broken out.

On Thursday police armed with guns stood guard outside petrol stations to
ensure order in long, winding queues. Trucks carrying supplies have
reportedly been ransacked en route to Palu.

Authorities initially turned a blind eye but have now taken a tougher
stance, with police rounding up dozens of suspected looters and the military
warning that soldiers will fire on anyone caught stealing.

While rescuers continue to comb through destroyed buildings, hope is
fading that anyone will be found alive under the rubble. Authorities say over
100 people are still unaccounted for.

At least 600,000 children have been affected by the quake, Save the
Children said, with many sleeping on the streets among ruins.

Attention has focused on the huge number of children left orphaned, or
separated from their families in the chaos as buildings collapsed across Palu
and people were swept away by huge waves.

Aid organisations are urgently working with the government to identify and
reunite them with their relatives, the group said.

“It’s hard to imagine a more frightening situation for a child,” said
Zubedy Koteng, the group’s child protection adviser, who is in the city.

“Many children are in shock and traumatised, alone and afraid. Young
children searching for surviving relatives will have witnessed and lived
through horrific experiences which no child should ever have to see.”

– Trickle of aid –

The Indonesian government initially refused to accept international help,
insisting its own military could handle the response, but as the scale of the
disaster became clear President Joko Widodo reluctantly agreed to allow in
foreign aid groups and governments.

Twenty-nine countries have pledged aid, according to Indonesia, but the
delay in inviting help and severed transport links means little foreign help
has arrived.

Palu airport — which was only accepting military flights in the early
stages of the disaster — opened to commercial services Thursday but only a
limited number, with aid workers given priority.

An Indonesian navy ship docked in the city Thursday carrying water, rice
and food, which was loaded by soldiers onto trucks.

“We have to get to places where people need aid really quickly,” said
first admiral Dwi Sulakson.

Desperate survivors, some crying, waited to get a spot on the vessel which
was set to return to the city of Makassar in southern Sulawesi, and brief
scuffles broke out with soldiers.

The United Nations has pledged $15 million from its emergency response
fund. The Red Cross is dispatching ships loaded with supplies including field
kitchens, tents, body bags and mosquito nets.

– Targeting looters –

In a country with a long-standing problem with “fake news”, authorities
vowed to clamp down after false reports related to the disaster circulated
online, including one saying another quake had hit Sulawesi.

Ferdinandus Setu, communications ministry spokesman, said authorities had
received several reports about suspected cases and were taking steps to
combat them, without giving further details.

“The ministry has a role to ensure that Indonesia’s internet sphere is
free from hoaxes,” he said.

Rescuers seeking survivors are focusing on half a dozen key sites around
Palu, including a shopping mall and the Balaroa area where the sheer force of
the quake turned the earth temporarily to mush.

At the badly damaged Mercure hotel, a team used sniffer dogs to try to
detect signs of life under mounds of rubble and twisted metal. French NGO
International Emergency Firefighters provided equipment to help in the hunt,
including scanners and sound detectors.

“There is always hope,” said the group’s president Philippe Besson. But he
added that “the building is really extremely unstable… since yesterday,
there has been so much wind that the building was starting to move on its
own.”

Authorities have set a tentative deadline of Friday to find anyone still
trapped under rubble, at which point the chances of finding anyone alive will
dwindle to almost zero.

There have been small signs of things returning to normal. Power has
returned to parts of Palu, phone networks are back up and even some markets
are open for business.

Indonesia sits along the Pacific “Ring of Fire”, the world’s most
tectonically active region, and its 260 million people are vulnerable to
earthquakes, tsunamis and volcanic eruptions.