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Third strong quake rocks Lombok

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MATARAM, 19 August July 2018 [Fik/News Sources]: A strong earthquake rocked the Indonesian island of Lombok Sunday, triggering landslides and sending people fleeing into the streets just two weeks after a tremor killed more than 480 people there.
The 6.3-magnitude quake, centered in East Lombok, struck at a relatively shallow depth of seven kilometers (four miles) and was felt across the island, officials said.
It was the third major quake in less than a month to rock the island, after deadly tremors on July 29 and August 5 and numerous aftershocks, but this time there were no immediate reports of deaths or injuries.
“The earthquake caused people to panic and flee their houses,” national disaster agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho told Metro TV.
“There have been no reports of death or (serious) damage but people are traumatized.”
Landslides were reported in a national park where hundreds of hikers had been briefly trapped on a volcano after the quake in late July. The park has been closed since that incident.
Residents said the latest earthquake was felt strongly in East Lombok.
“I was driving to deliver aid to evacuees when suddenly the electricity pole was swaying. I realized it was an earthquake.
“People started to scream and cry. They all ran to the street,” East Lombok resident Agus Salim told AFP.
The tremor was also felt in the island’s capital Mataram and on the neighboring resort island of Bali.
“Everybody ran outside their house. They’re all gathering in an open field, still terrified,” said Endri Susanto, a children rights activist in Mataram.
“People are traumatized by the previous earthquakes and aftershocks never seem to stop.”
The latest tremor comes two weeks after a shallow 6.9-magnitude quake on August 5 levelled tens of thousands of homes, mosques and businesses across Lombok.
At least 481 people died and tens of thousands were injured.
The hardest-hit region was in the north of the island, which has suffered hundreds of aftershocks since.
A week before that quake, a tremor surged through the island and killed 17.
The August 5 quake left more than 350,000 displaced, with many sleeping under tents or tarpaulins near their ruined homes or in evacuation shelters, while makeshift medical facilities were set up to treat the injured.
Badly damaged roads, particularly in the mountainous north of the island, are a headache for relief agencies trying to distribute aid.
The economic toll of the quake — including its impact to buildings, infrastructure and productivity — has been estimated to be at least five trillion rupiah ($348 million).
Dubbed “The Island of a Thousand Mosques,” Muslim-majority Lombok is a less popular destination than its neighbor Bali, the Hindu-majority island that forms the backbone of Indonesia’s $19.4 billion tourist sector.
But Lombok had been earmarked as one of Indonesian President Joko Widodo’s “10 new Balis,” with the regional government hoping to develop it into a major destination, especially in the booming halal tourism sector.
Indonesia, an archipelago of thousands of islands, sits on the so-called Pacific “Ring of Fire,” where tectonic plates collide and many of the world’s volcanic eruptions and earthquakes occur
In 2004 a tsunami triggered by a magnitude 9.3 undersea earthquake off the coast of Sumatra, in western Indonesia, killed 220,000 people in countries around the Indian Ocean, including 168,000 in Indonesia.

Meanwhile a strong 8.2-magnitude earthquake struck off Fiji on Sunday, the US Geological Survey said, but it was too deep to generate a tsunami and there were no reports of damage.
The tremor hit at 12:19 p.m. local time 361 kilometers (224 miles) east of the Pacific nation’s capital Suva, at a depth of 563 kilometers, the US seismologists said.

The Hawaii-based Pacific Tsunami Warning Center said there was “no tsunami threat because the earthquake is located too deep inside the Earth.”

The quake, and several aftershocks ranging up to magnitude 6.8, were felt as a rippling effect in the outer Lau islands group but residents in Suva, on the main island of Viti Levu, said they did not feel a thing.
The government’s Seismology Unit issued a statement saying the earthquake “does not pose any immediate threat to the Fiji region due to its deep depth.”

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