International
Indonesia earthquake: Schoolchildren among 268 killed─── 05:33 Wed, 23 Nov 2022

Children who were killed when their school buildings collapsed are among the 268 dead following an earthquake that devastated a town in Indonesia.
According to Sky News, more than 1000 people were injured and 58 000 displaced after the 5.6-magnitude quake struck in the mountains of West Java on Monday, causing significant damage to the town of Cianjur and burying at least one village under a landslide.
At least 151 people remain missing, with authorities warning the death toll is likely to rise further.
Around 22 000 houses were damaged.
Excavators, trucks and other heavy equipment were sent overnight to the hardest-hit city of Cianjur, south of Jakarta.
Blocked roads and damaged bridges prevented rescuers from bringing excavators and heavy equipment to the rural area until Tuesday.
President Joko Widodo travelled to a village in Cianjur on Tuesday to console residents and encourage rescuers in their efforts to find more people.
Indonesian President Joko Widodo walked with Army Chief of Staff Gen. Dudung Abdurachman during their visit to a village affected by an earthquake-triggered landslide in Cianjur.
"On behalf of myself and on behalf of the government, I would like to express my deep condolences to the victims and their families in this Cianjur earthquake," he said after visiting survivors in shelters on a football field.
"My instruction is to prioritise evacuating victims that are still trapped under rubble," he added.
West Java's governor, Ridwan Kamil, said on Monday: "The majority of those who died were children."
He added that many were public school students who had finished their regular classes and were taking extra lessons at Islamic schools.
Twenty-five aftershocks were recorded within two hours after the quake, according to the weather and geophysics agency BMKG.
Roughly 175 000 people live in the town of Cianjur, part of a mountainous district with the same name, with more than 2,5 million people.
Indonesia straddles the so-called "Pacific Ring of Fire", a highly seismically active zone where different plates on the earth's crust meet and create many of the world's earthquakes.