Death toll in Indonesia after a tsunami slammed into densely-populated coastal areas along the Sunda Strait on Saturday night has climbed to 430, the UN has said.
Government-led relief efforts are being stepped up at the tip of the Indonesia’s two main islands of Sumatra and Java, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said.
The UN humanitarian agency reported that as of Wednesday, the Indonesian National Disaster Management Agency (BNPB) also put the number of the injured at 1,495 injured, while 159 were missing.
An estimated 22,000 people are displaced due to shelter damage and the latest tsunami alert.
Damages include some 924 houses, 73 hotels and villas, 60 shops, 434 boats and 65 vehicles.
Indonesia’s Meteorology, Climatology and Geophysics Agency warned that a new tsunami could affect the area surrounding the Anak Krakatau volcano in the Sunda Strait.
Authorities are alerting people to stay up to one kilometre away from the coastal area.
The deadly tsunami was believed to have been triggered by an underwater landslide following a volcanic eruption on Saturday.
Wednesday marked the anniversary of 2004’s deadly 26 December Indian Ocean quake and tsunami, which killed more than 226,000 people in 13 countries, with Indonesia bearing the highest number of fatalities.
“Most survivors have been huddling in temporary shelters away from the shore, but have started to emerge to search for loved ones and assess damage to their property.
“Our teams are seeing many broken bones and broken homes, and people who are very shaken.
“Indonesians have withstood a string of disasters this year and with them, so much loss and misery,” said Mr Arifin Hadi, Head of Disaster Management at the Indonesian Red Cross.
More than 400 Red Cross staff and volunteers were reportedly delivering medical services and supplies to tsunami-ravaged villages.
Meanwhile, the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC), support office in Jakarta, pointed out that previous disaster responses illustrated the value of providing rapid treatment for the injured.
Jan Gelfand, head of the UN partner agency, stressed: “Providing rapid treatment for the injured not only to save lives, but also to prevent long-term health complications.”
“The Indonesian Red Cross’s mobile medical teams are reaching remote and hard-to-reach areas to treat people who haven’t had help since Saturday,” the IFRC chief explained.
On Tuesday, IFRC announced that it was releasing more than $333,583 from its Disaster Relief Emergency Fund to replenish relief items and enable the Indonesian Red Cross to ramp up medical care, psychosocial support, sanitation services and the distribution of clean water for an estimated 7,000 people in affected areas.
Since the December 2004 tsunami, Indonesian Red Cross staff and volunteers have received extensive disaster preparedness and response training, with volunteers in the weekend’s hardest hit Banten province, having conducted tsunami awareness and response exercises with at-risk communities only two months ago.
For its part, UNICEF Indonesia is providing targeted assistance through bed-nets and school sanitation kits, as well as technical assistance on nutrition and child protection in the aftermath of the disaster.
UN agencies, the Government and other humanitarian partners are still working together to support ongoing humanitarian efforts for the earthquake and tsunami that struck Lombok and Central Sulawesi provinces in late September, focused on the city of Palu. (NAN)