CIANJUR, INDONESIA: Survivors of an Indonesian earthquake that killed at least 268 people appealed for food and water Wednesday, as heavy rain and aftershocks hampered rescue efforts among the rubble of devastated villages.
The calls for help came as authorities warned that debris from landslides caused by the strong quake near the town of Cianjur in West Java needed to be cleared as rains forecast for the coming weeks threatened a second disaster.
A shallow 3.9-magnitude aftershock sent panicked evacuees running from shelters on Wednesday, according to an AFP reporter at the scene.
More than 58,000 people have been displaced by the quake, around 1,000 are injured and 151 are missing, with more than half of the dead still to be identified, the national disaster mitigation agency (BNPB) said Tuesday.
The government has dispatched tents and other supplies to Cianjur for the displaced, and the military deployed 12,000 personnel on Wednesday, officials said. Heavy rain was hampering those efforts in about a dozen villages where more than 22,000 houses had been destroyed.
"For the refugees... their basic life necessities must be guaranteed, water, food, that's non-negotiable," BNPB chief Suharyanto, who like many Indonesians goes by one name, told a press conference Wednesday.
Two villages remain isolated, said Henri Alfiandi, head of Indonesia's search and rescue authority Basarnas, in a video posted to social media.
He said he had reports of trapped villagers without food and water, and some forced to sleep alongside dead bodies. "The people there can't even ask for help," he said, adding three helicopters were being sent to drop aid.
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