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Bangkok Post
Bangkok Post
World

Young boy's 'miracle' rescue from Java quake rubble

Rescue workers were still searching for at least 40 missing people after the West Java earthquake.

CIANJUR, Indonesia: A six-year-old boy has been pulled from the rubble of a deadly Indonesia earthquake after spending two days trapped under debris without food or water, in a "miracle" rescue.

The dramatic rescue captured on camera Wednesday evening revived hopes that survivors could still be pulled alive from the wreckage days after the strong tremor that hit the West Java town of Cianjur on Monday, killing at least 271 people.

"Once we realised Azka was alive everybody broke into tears, including me," 28-year-old local volunteer Jeksen told AFP on Thursday.

"It was very moving, it felt like a miracle."

Video showed rescue workers pulling the boy Azka free from a destroyed home in Cianjur's worst-hit district of Cugenang, wearing the blue shirt and trousers he had on when he became trapped.

The man who pulled him out of a hole cut in the debris clasped him in both arms, as another rescue worker in an orange hard hat ran after them to hold the boy's hand, footage released by the administration of West Java's Bogor district showed.

Azka -- who like many Indonesians goes by one name -- was then shown calmly sipping a drink, held by a soldier as another emergency worker stroked his hair.

His mother died in the earthquake and her body was found hours before Azka's rescue, a volunteer told AFP on Thursday.

The boy was then found next to his dead grandmother, Jeksen said.

He was only saved by a wall holding up another collapsed wall, preventing it from falling on him, local media reported.

"He was found on the left side of the house, on a bed. He was protected by a pillow and there was a 10-centimetre gap between him and the concrete slab," said Jeksen. "Such a narrow space, it was dark, hot and there was not enough hole for air."

"We didn't expect him to still be alive after 48 hours, if we knew we would have tried harder the night before," he said.

"For all the years since I became a volunteer, I've never seen anything like this. How can you not cry?"

Many of those killed in the quake were children at school or in their homes when it struck, officials said.

But authorities warned that time was running out as rescue workers were delayed by hammering rain and potentially deadly aftershocks.

"Today for the search and rescue operation we deployed 6,000 people. It was raining but we keep searching," said Suharyanto, head of the national disaster mitigation agency, or BNPB.

"Please pray for us so the 40 missing people could be found."

Authorities are continuing to search for dozens who remain buried under debris, including a missing seven-year-old girl.

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