Indonesian quake leaves 46 dead, dozens missing
CIKANGKARENG, Indonesia (AP) – Rescuers dug through rocks and debris with their bare hands Thursday in search of dozens of villagers believed buried in a landslide triggered by a strong Indonesian earthquake that killed at least 46 people and caused widespread damage.
At least 110 people were hospitalized with injuries from the 7.0 magnitude quake just off the coast of densely populated Java Island, Disaster Management Agency spokesman Priyadi Kardono said, adding that 10 were in critical condition.
The earthquake Wednesday afternoon caused destruction across West Java province, where 700 buildings toppled or were badly damaged.
Many of the deaths and injuries were caused by falling debris or collapsed walls and roofs.
In the village of Cikangkareng in Cianjur district, a landslide buried a row of homes under tons of rock and mud. At least 13 bodies were recovered and villagers were searching for dozens of people believed missing, Kardono said.
``Everything is gone, my wife, my old father-in-law and my house ... now I just hope to find the bodies of my family,'' farmer Ahmad Suhana, 34, said as he pried at giant stones with a crowbar.
Heavy digging equipment had not reached the remote village, which President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono was to visit later Thursday.
Police, military personnel and villagers used their hands.
Maskana Sumitra, a district administrator, said 11 houses and a mosque were buried by the landslide and estimated that more than 50 people were trapped and feared dead.
``The chance of survival is so slim ... but we have to find them,'' Sumitra said.
The prolonged shaking from the quake was felt hundreds of kilometers away on the neighboring resort island of Bali.
In the capital, Jakarta, 190 kilometers north, thousands of panicked office workers flooded out of swaying skyscrapers onto the streets, some of them screaming.
The Disaster Management Agency said at least 46 people were confirmed dead.




