*******, INDONESIA — A strong and shallow earthquake early Sunday ****** at least 14 people and ******* more than 160 on Indonesia’s Lombok island, a popular tourist destination next to Bali, officials said.
The quake damaged more than 1,000 houses and was felt in a wider area, including on Bali, where no damage or ********** were reported.
The U.S. Geological Survey said the quake struck at a depth of only 7 kilometres (4.4 miles). Shallow earthquakes tend to do more damage than deeper ones.
a friend of mine who’s currently in Lombok sent me these pics. my heart and prayer goes to all the ********* and ******* of the earthquake. pic.twitter.com/MOgtdvwaZP
— Anggita Wendy (@anggitawendy) July 29, 2018
East Lombok district was the hardest hit with 10 ******, including a Malaysian tourist, said Sutopo Purwo Nugroho, a spokesman for Indonesia’s ******** Mitigation Agency. The number of ********** could increase as data was still being collected from other locations on the island, he said.
At least 162 people were *******, including 67 hospitalized with serious ********, Nugroho said.
The quake caused blackouts in East Lombok and North Lombok districts and triggered a large landslide from Mount Rinjani, an active volcano. Rescuers were evacuating more than 800 tourists from the mountain.
#Earthquake_alert – The impact of 7/29/18 – 06:47 local time Mag 6.4 SR quake at 28 km NW of East Lombok w/ 10 km hypocenter, some structures & houses are damaged in Sambelia, East Lombok. The BPBD is still collecting the data. Source: @Sutopo_PN #Lombok pic.twitter.com/EewC7iPDQ4 https://t.co/bH7VHxVjFL
— Desianto F. Wibisono (@TDesiantoFW) July 29, 2018
In East Lombok and the provincial capital of Mataram, the quake lasted about 10 seconds, causing residents to flee their homes onto streets and fields, Nugroho said. He said most of the fatalities and ******** were caused by falling slabs of concrete.
Photos released by the ******** agency showed damaged houses and the entrance to the popular Mount Rinjani National Park, which was immediately closed for fear of landslides.
Television footage showed residents remaining outside, fearing aftershocks, as the ******* were being treated on mattresses taken out of their partially damaged houses and patients were wheeled out of a hospital.
Indonesia’s meteorology and geophysics agency recorded more than 130 aftershocks.
Eka Fathurrahman, the ****** chief in East Lombok, said the Malaysian woman who **** was part of a group of 18 Malaysian tourists who had just visited Mount Rinjani when the quake jolted their guesthouse and toppled a concrete wall. Six other people were ******* at the guesthouse.
Indonesia is prone to earthquakes due to its location on the Pacific “Ring of ****,” an arc of volcanoes and fault lines in the Pacific Basin. In December 2004, a massive magnitude 9.1 earthquake off Sumatra triggered a ******* that ****** 230,000 people in a dozen countries.