

World Featured
More than 200 hikers are trapped on a mountain on the Indonesian tourist island of Lombok, after a deadly earthquake triggered landslides which cut off escape routes.
Hundreds of rescue workers are now working to evacuate them from Mount Rinjani, a popular hiking destination.
The 6.4 magnitude earthquake struck early on Sunday not far from the base of the mountain.
At least 14 people have died, and more than 160 were injured in the quake.
Thousands of homes have been damaged and hundreds have been left homeless as substantial aftershocks rocked Lombok and neighbouring Bali island.
A Malaysian tourist who was on a hiking trip to Mount Rinjani was among those killed. Another young Indonesian hiker was also killed by falling rocks.
Hikers from France, Thailand, the Netherlands and Malaysia are among those waiting to be evacuated off Mount Rinjani.
Authorities say more than 500 people, mostly foreign tourists, have already come down from the mountain but 266 are still trapped up there. Helicopters are now searching for the stranded.
Rinjani, a volcanic mountain, draws hundreds of thousands of climbers from across the world each year, says BBC Indonesian editor Rebecca Henschke on the island.
Dramatic footage filmed by guides on the mountain at the time of the earthquake showed huge landslides near the crater lake.
One tour guide, named as Sukanta, described the situation of those trapped up on the mountain.
"Some of the people [were at] the lake, because the location of the lake is in the middle...they cannot go anywhere because of landslides... They have to stay near the lake," he said.
A group of Malaysian tourists, who have now reached safety and are due to leave Lombok by plane on Monday had earlier posted for help on Facebook.
Indonesia is prone to earthquakes because it lies on the Ring of Fire - the line of frequent quakes and volcanic eruptions that circles virtually the entire Pacific rim.
More than half of the world's active volcanoes above sea level are part of the ring.
Source: BBC
< Prev | Next > |
---|
» Indonesian language officially taught at Vietnam National University
» Indonesia tsunami: New warning system 'to be built next year'
» Indonesians worry another tsunami is coming
Latest Category Posts
- Chinese couples can't afford a second child, no matter what Beijing wants
- Why wild pigs are causing a stir in Hong Kong
- Hong Kong customs seize record haul of pangolin scales bound for Vietnam
- World's largest annual human migration now underway in China
- China sentences Canadian to death for drug smuggling
- Thousands of tourists flee Thai islands as Tropical Storm Pabuk approaches
- World's largest ice and snow festival kicks off in China
- Inside the Japanese town that pays cash for kids
- South Korea turning away from dog meat trade
- Indonesia tsunami: New warning system 'to be built next year'
Random Category Picks
- Why wild pigs are causing a stir in Hong Kong
- Japan suffers biggest natural population decline ever in 2018
- China sentences Canadian to death for drug smuggling
- Fears for more tsunamis after hundreds killed in Indonesia
- Indonesians worry another tsunami is coming
- Inside the Japanese town that pays cash for kids
Popular Category Posts
- Japan explosion: Dozens injured in Sapporo restaurant blast
- Thousands of tourists flee Thai islands as Tropical Storm Pabuk approaches
- Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou arrested in Canada
- Indonesia tsunami: New warning system 'to be built next year'
- China sentences Canadian to death for drug smuggling
- China to 'cut US car tariff to 15%'
- World's largest annual human migration now underway in China
- South Korea turning away from dog meat trade
- Huawei arrest: China demands Canada free Meng Wanzhou
- World's largest ice and snow festival kicks off in China
- Fears for more tsunamis after hundreds killed in Indonesia
- Indonesians worry another tsunami is coming
- Japan suffers biggest natural population decline ever in 2018
- Why wild pigs are causing a stir in Hong Kong
- Hong Kong customs seize record haul of pangolin scales bound for Vietnam
- Inside the Japanese town that pays cash for kids
- Chinese couples can't afford a second child, no matter what Beijing wants
World & Region Latest
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5
- 6
- 7