JAKARTA, Indonesia (BP)Southern Baptist relief workers
in Indonesia rushed March 29 to join a relief team already
surveying damage on Nias, the island off Sumatras western
coast devastated by a second massive earthquake in the region.
The relief team on Nias when the quake hitvisiting to
assess damage from Decembers tsunamirode out the
temblors violent shaking in a mountain town where they were
spending the night. After the quake subsided, they abandoned
their four-wheel-drive vehicle and traveled by motorcycles around
huge cracks and chunks of cement on the roads to reach Gunung
Sitoli, the devastated coastal capital. Officials estimate
hundreds of bodies lie buried under collapsed buildings in the
city.
The relief workers found heavy destruction thereand most
of the dazed population of the city sitting or sleeping outside.
Most of the buildings with over two stories collapsed or
sustained heavy damage, local officials said.
Gunung Sitoli was 80 percent destroyed, a Southern
Baptist worker in Indonesia reported. At least 350 bodies
have already been found. The [final] death toll will be many
times that number.
A second Baptist team was traveling March 29 from the
Indonesian mainland to meet the workers in Nias and begin relief
efforts. Another teamincluding California Baptist disaster
volunteers already in Indonesia for tsunami reliefhad
planned to travel by chartered aircraft to nearby Simuelue
Island, also badly damaged in the quake. After being told planes
were turning back because of damage to the Simuelue airport
runway, they also headed for Nias.
That team includes a doctor, a firefighter, two emergency
medical technicians and a disaster assessment specialist. They
took rescue tools and medical supplies and expected to join the
workers already in Gunung Sitoli. Four-wheel-drive vehicles were
scheduled to be transported to them via ferry from the Sumatran
mainland March 30.
Southern Baptist workers still hope to go to Simuelue as soon
as possible. We have talked to Save the Children, who have
a team on Simuelue, a worker said. The damage [there]
is much worse than on Dec. 26. Most of the capital city has been
heavily damaged. We have not gotten any word on the town of
Singkil [on the island of the same name], which is directly
parallel with the center of the earthquake between Simuelue and
Nias islands. Nor do we have word on the Banyak islands that were
very close to the center of the earthquake.
No Southern Baptist workers or volunteers were injured in the
earthquake. Tragedy struck local believers on Nias, however. A
pastor accompanying the tsunami assessment team in the mountains
reached Gunung Sitoli to find his home destroyed, one of his two
sons killed and another in critical condition.
Please ask our Father to heal and protect this injured
young man and his family, the Baptist worker asked.
Southern Baptists are preparing additional volunteer teams to
respond to the new crisis.
The state Baptist convention disaster relief network is
again being mobilized to furnish specialized volunteers in
response to the earthquake, reported Jim Brown, human needs
coordinator for the International Mission Board. I know the
up-front groups are going to be medical until we hear more. We
had already thought about doing some rebuilding of schools and
houses in these islands. Thats going to stay the same, but
now well have more emergency response there than what we
had anticipated.
Brown emphasized that relief response to both the tsunami
disaster and the latest quakes damage will continue for
months and years to come. Trained disaster relief volunteers
interested in serving should contact their state convention
disaster relief offices. For state-by-state contact information,
visit www.namb.net/site/pp.asp?c=9qKILUOzEpH&b=238540.
By March 29, Southern Baptist churches and individuals had
given more than $14.6 million for tsunami response efforts
throughout the region.
The March 28 earthquake, which struck just before midnight
local time, lasted about three minutes. It packed an estimated
magnitude of 8.2 to
8.7 and caused widespread regional panicparticularly in
devastated Banda Aceh, where the Dec. 26 quake and tsunami killed
up to 200,000 people. Thousands of terrified people poured into
the streets and fled into the mountains, fearing another killer
tsunami.
As day dawned March 29, it became clear a major tsunami would
not wash over the ravaged coast. But people remain fearful.
As each moment passed the risk decreased, but the fear
was great among those who lost so much Dec. 26, said
Eleanor Witcher of the IMB International Prayer Strategy Office.
Please pray for the millions of people living in the
coastal regions of the Indian Ocean, that panic will not take
over and create chaos. Pray for relief workers to powerfully
sense the presence of the Holy Spirit and be able to express
grace in the midst of turmoil. May they boldly speak the Gospel,
recognizing the urgency of the message of Jesus.
Please pray that the millions who began asking probing
questions about God when the tsunami struck one day after
Christmas will seek Him now. We are assured that when they seek
Him, they will find the Savior.