At least two people have been killed after a 'moderately strong' earthquake hit Indonesia's Lombok tourist island. At least 77 others have lost their lives in landslides and flash floods in the country's Papua province.
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Officials in Indonesia said on Sunday an earthquake triggered a landslide from the country's second highest volcano, Mount Rinjani. The 5.5-magnitude quake was felt across Lombok, a popular trekking destination.
Two tourists were killed in the landslide and 44 other people were injured, said an official from Indonesia's disaster agency. Dozens of people visiting the nearby Tiu Kelep waterfall were rescued.
Flash floods and mudslides in the country's easternmost Papua province meanwhile killed at least 77 people and injured more than 70 others, local officials said on Monday, raising the death toll. Thousands of people have been left homeless.
The flooding was due to torrential rain, which hit the provincial capital of Jayapura beginning Saturday.
"Most of the bodies were found under damaged houses and buried under materials brought down from the mountain area by the flash floods," said a spokesman for Papua police, Muhammad Aidi.
The water has submerged more than 150 houses in the badly hit Sentani area near Jayapura, said Sutopo Nugroho, spokesman for the National Disaster Mitigation Agency.
He added that nine villages in Jayapura had been flooded and three bridges damaged.
"Waters have now receded, leaving mud, logs and other materials carried by the flash floods," Nugroho said in a statement, adding that the death toll "will probably increase because the evacuation process is still taking place and not all affected areas have been reached."
More than 4,000 people were staying in temporary shelters, with authorities, the Red Cross and volunteers helping the displaced.
The province's administration has declared a two-week emergency in order to get assistance from the central government.
Flooding is fairly common during Indonesia's rainy season, which runs from October to April. In January, floods and landslides killed at least 70 people on Sulawesi Island. Severe inundation triggered by downpours in West Java province earlier this month also prompted hundreds of people to flee their homes.
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