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Updated at 8:01 a.m., Thursday, September 13, 2007

Tsunami alerts for 2nd day as quakes rock Indonesia

By ANTHONY DEUTSCH
Associated Press

 

A man sits on debris swept ashore today by a tsunami following an earthquake in Muara Maras, Bengkulu, Sumatra island, Indonesia. A series of earthquakes jolted Indonesia in less than 24 hours, sending a 10-foot tsunami crashing to shore, damaging hundreds of houses and terrifying residents.

IRWIN FEDRIANSYAH | Associated Press

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PADANG, Indonesia — Indonesia was shaken by series of powerful earthquakes in less than 24 hours Thursday, a day after survivors watched in horror as the ocean retreated and raced back to shore as a 10-foot-high tsunami.

Hundreds of houses were destroyed in Wednesday's quake that sent panicked residents fleeing to the hills. At least 10 people were killed.

The most powerful quake Thursday was one registering a magnitude of 7.8 off Sumatra, the U.S. Geological Survey said.

Indonesia issued and lifted several tsunami warnings throughout the day, including one after a 6.2-magnitude quake at 11:09 p.m. (6:09 a.m. Hawai'i time) that was centered 166 miles offshore from the island of Sumatra, 34 miles beneath the ocean floor, the USGS said.

Wednesday's 8.4-magnitude quake that first shook Southeast Asia was the strongest this year. But the huge mass of water it spawned was pushed to sea rather than land, said Mike Turnbull, a seismologist at Australia's Central Queensland University.

"It's a quirk of nature that this is how it happened," he said. "It could have quite easily have been the other way."

The 10-foot wave slammed into at least one village on Sumatra, the island ravaged by the 2004 tsunami that killed more than 230,000 people in a dozen nations.

Rukhlan, a 43-year-old fisherman, said residents of the village, Muara Maras, were horrified when they saw the ocean retreat and then race back to shore.

"I heard people screaming and yelling tsunami! tsunami!" he said. "I ran to find my children, but they had already run to the hills."

A dozen houses were swept out to sea. Smaller waves were recorded further down the coast.

SERIES OF TEMBLORS, AFTERSHOCKS

Temblors registering magnitudes of 7.8, 7.1 and two of 6.2 followed on Thursday in western and eastern Indonesia, the U.S. Geological Survey said. They were accompanied by dozens of aftershocks.

The worst destruction was caused by the jolts along the coast, especially in the city of Padang, 115 miles from the epicenter below the seabed off the western coast of Sumatra.

"At least five large buildings — including mosques, houses and a school — collapsed," said Surya Budhi, who was overseeing emergency response in the area, and rescuers were searching for survivors at a badly damaged car dealership.

A fire also broke out on the fourth floor of a shopping mall.

Yulinar, a fisherman's wife who lives with her husband and five children in a wooden shack at a waterfront market in Padang, said the second, magnitude-7.8 quake, just six miles deep, was so powerful they had to grab onto the furniture to keep from falling down when it struck at 6:49 a.m.

"It was very bad," said Yulinar, who fled inland with her family after a tsunami warning from the mayor was broadcast through mosque speakers. "I was so scared the tsunami was coming."

The third quake struck at 4:48 p.m. off Sulawesi island along a different fault line at a depth of13 miles, the USGS said.

More than 30 aftershocks have rattled the region in the last day and many people refused to return to their homes, fearing a repeat of the 2004 tsunami. Nearly two-thirds of the deaths in that disaster were in nearby Aceh province.

Australia's Bureau of Meteorology warned that unusual waves could hit Christmas Island, but locals said there was no sign of a tsunami about an hour after the predicted time.

"The danger has passed," said Linda Cash, a manager at the Christmas Island Visitors Center, adding that police were telling people to stay away from beaches.

DAMAGE, CASUALTIES HARD TO ESTIMATE

Telephone lines and electricity were disrupted across a large swath of Indonesia, making it difficult to get information about damage and casualties.

Death tolls released by several agencies ranged from five to 10. Rustam Pakaya, the chief of Health Crisis Center, gave the latter figure, which was based on information gathered from local hospitals, clinics and regional health offices. He said at least 49 people were injured.

Sensitive to criticism about slow responses to the 2004 tsunami disaster, governments issued alerts as far away as Kenya and Tanzania in East Africa, telling people to leave beaches. People in Mombasa, Kenya, crowded into buses after hearing the warning over the radio.

Thailand's National Disaster Warning Center sent cell phone text messages alerting hundreds of officials in six southern provinces, and authorities also were told to prepare in India's remote Andaman and Nicobar islands.

Sri Lankans were told to move more than 650 feet inland.

Indonesia, the world's largest archipelago, with a population of 235 million people, is prone to seismic upheaval due to its location on the "Ring of Fire," an arc of volcanos and fault lines encircling the Pacific Basin.

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Associated Press writer Zakki Hakim contributed to this report.