| Indonesian
VP: Quake May Kill Up to 2,000
By MICHAEL CASEY,
Associated Press Writer

Tue Mar 29, 6:17 AM ET
BANDA ACEH, Indonesia - A powerful earthquake
struck off Indonesia's west coast late Monday, killing scores
of people whose homes collapsed on them and spreading panic
across the Indian Ocean that another killer tsunami was on the
way. Indonesia's vice president predicted up to 2,000 deaths.
Fears of a second tsunami catastrophe in just
over three months eased within hours, as officials in countries
at risk reported their coasts clear of the type of earthquake-spawned
waves that ravaged a dozen countries in Asia and Africa on Dec.
26.
Almost all the deaths reported after the 8.7-magnitude
quake were on Indonesia's Nias island, a popular surfing spot
off Sumatra island's west coast and close to the epicenter.
Police were pulling children's' bodies out of the rubble of
collapsed houses, and a fire was reportedly raging in one town.
"It is predicted and it's still a
rough estimate that the numbers of dead may be between
1,000 and 2,000," Vice President Jusuf Kalla told the el-Shinta
radio station, saying the estimate was based on an assessment
of damage to buildings.
Other estimates varied. A district official in
the town of Gunungsitoli said about 300 had died there, while
Indonesia's information minister said between 100 and 200 had
died.

Tue Mar 29, 3:13 AM ET
Two people were also killed in Sri Lanka during
a panicky evacuation from the coast in a Tamil rebel-held area,
authorities said.
The U.S. Geological Survey said the quake struck
about 19 miles under the seabed, some 155 miles south-southeast
of Banda Aceh, the capital of Aceh province on Sumatra island.
It was centered just 110 miles southeast of December's 9.0-magnitude
temblor the world's most powerful in 40 years.
Monday's wallop, although very powerful, was but
a fraction of the earlier quake. In explosive power, December's
quake was equal to 100 million pounds of TNT; it caused the
seabed to spring up as much as 60 feet.
Terrified of a disaster of equal proportions,
sirens sounded throughout the region as authorities issued tsunami
alerts for six countries after the quake struck at 11:06 p.m.
as many people were sleeping.
Women clutching children ran into the darkened
streets of Banda Aceh, crying and chanting "Allahu Akbar,"
or "God is Great." Others grabbed small bags of clothes
and fled their tents and homes for higher ground.
Another man rushed instead to the local mosque,
saying "Where can I go, you can't outrun a tsunami."
The quake lasted two minutes and briefly cut electricity
in Banda Aceh. Thousands poured into the streets, where flickering
campfires and motorbike and car headlights provided the only
lighting.
People grabbed small bags of clothes as they fled
their tents and homes. Many were crying and jumping into cars
and onto motorbikes and pedicabs to head for higher ground.
Two women wearing prayer shawls and sarongs grabbed a fence
to steady themselves.
"People are still traumatized, still scared,
they are running for higher ground," said Feri, a 24-year-old
aid volunteer who goes by one name.
In Sri Lanka, warning sirens blared along the
island nation's east coast and President Chandrika Kumaratunga
urged people to evacuate immediately to higher ground.
"It was like reliving the same horror of
three months ago," said Fatheena Faleel, who fled her home
with her three children after seeing the warning on television.

Mon Mar 28, 1:11 PM ET
In Malaysia, residents fled their shaking apartments
and hotels.
"I was getting ready for bed, and suddenly,
the room started shaking," said Jessie Chong, a resident
of the largest city, Kuala Lumpur. "I thought I was hallucinating
at first, but then I heard my neighbors screaming and running
out."
The quake was felt as far away as Singapore and
the Thai capital, Bangkok, more than 435 miles from the epicenter.
Nias island was badly hit on Dec. 26, when at
least 340 residents were killed and 10,000 were left homeless.
The devastation there from Monday's quake appeared
to be far worse.
Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono
said early Tuesday he would fly to the stricken island to assess
the damage for himself.
In the town of Gunungsitoli, about 70 percent
of buildings collapsed in the market district, officials said.
"Hundreds of buildings have been damaged
or have collapsed," said Agus Mendrofa, the island's deputy
district head. He told el-Shinta radio station that at least
296 people had died in Gunungsitoli.
The MISNA missionary news agency in Rome, Italy,
reported that a huge fire was raging early Tuesday in Gunungsitoli.
"From the window I see very high flames,"
MISNA quoted Father Raymond Laia as saying by telephone about
two miles from the town. "The town is completely destroyed.
I repeat, the town is completely destroyed."
But an overflight of the town at low altitude
later revealed that although many houses had sustained damage,
the overall level of destruction appeared to be lower than initial
reports indicated.
Another police officer, who identified himself
as Nainggolan, said rescuers were trying to pull people out
of the rubble, and that many were still panicking because of
several aftershocks.
"We are busy now trying to pull people or
bodies of children from the collapsed building," said Nainggolan,
who like many Indonesians uses only one name. "It is very
hard also because there is no power."
"The situation here is really messy,"
he said. "Aftershocks keep hitting every half hour making
thousands of people flee their homes and afraid to go home."
U.S. State Department deputy spokesman Adam Ereli
said U.S. diplomatic missions in Asia and Africa went into "battle
mode" to respond quickly to any contingency. Authorities
worldwide had been slow to recognize the magnitude of the Dec.
26 disaster, which killed at least 175,000 people in 12 Indian
Ocean nations and left another 106,000 missing.
Preliminary indications were that energy from
Monday's quake might be directed toward the southwest, said
Frank Gonzalez, an oceanographer with the National Oceanographic
and Atmospheric Administration in Seattle.
The only tsunami reported was a small one
10 inches at the Cocos Islands, 1,400 miles west of Australia.
Hours later, Australian meterologists reported a tsunami-caused
wave of 10 to 20 inches hitting to the north and south of the
Western Australia state capital Perth. No damage was reported
in either area.
Officials said after the December disaster that
a tsunami early warning system could have saved many lives.
Such a system exists in the Pacific but has not been established
in the Indian Ocean. Japan and the United States had planned
to start providing tsunami warnings to countries around the
Indian Ocean this month as a stopgap measure until the region
establishes its own alert system.
But for residents of ravaged Banda Aceh, no warning
system was needed after they felt the quake and headed for higher
ground.
At the city's biggest refugee camp, a voice on
loudspeaker later announced that there was no tsunami. This
time, the voice said, people could return to their tents.
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