A disaster official says the death toll from an earthquake and tsunami in Indonesia has climbed to 282 as helicopters with rescuers and emergency supplies finally reach the remote islands affected by Monday's giant wave.
Disaster official Ade Edward raised the estimated number of casualties to 282 dead and 411 missing today, up from 154 earlier in the day.
The first aerial surveys of the region revealed huge swaths of land underwater and the crumbled rubble of homes torn apart by the wave.
Planes and helicopters packed with rescue workers and supplies landed for the first time today on remote Indonesian islands that were pounded by a 10-foot (three-meter) tsunami, sweeping away villages and people.
The first aerial surveys of the region revealed huge swaths of land underwater and the crumbled rubble of homes torn apart by the wave. One lay tilted, resting on the edge of its red roof, with tires and slabs of concrete piled up on the surrounding sand.
President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, meanwhile, cut short a state visit to Vietnam to deal with two major disasters that struck Indonesia in less than 24 hours. The country's most volatile volcano, Mount Merapi, 800 miles (1,300 kilometers) to the east, erupted at dusk yesterday, sending up searing ash clouds and killing more than two dozen people.
Both events fell along Indonesia's portion of the Pacific Ring of Fire, a series of fault lines that are prone to earthquakes and volcanic activity stretching from the Western Hemisphere through Japan and Southeast Asia.
"I want to make sure the emergency response has been running well," president Yudhoyono, a former general, told reporters in Hanoi. "I want to see for myself the condition of the victims."
For days, rough seas and bad weather have hampered relief operations, leaving residents to fend for themselves. With not enough people to dig graves, corpses can be seen on beaches and roads, according to district chief Edison Salelo Baja. Fisherman were scouring waters in search of survivors.
Disaster officials were still trying to reach more than a dozen villages on the hardest-hit Mentawai islands - a popular surfer's destination that is usually reachable only by a 12-hour boat ride.
Hundreds of body bags have been sent to the scene, said Mr Mujiharto, who heads the Health Ministry's crisis centre.
The 7.7-magnitude quake that struck late on Monday just 13 miles beneath the ocean floor was followed by at least 14 aftershocks, the largest measuring 6.2.
Harmensyah, who heads the West Sumatra provincial disaster management center, said the number of people killed in the tsunami had climbed to 154 and more than 400 others were missing.
The first cargo plane loaded down with 16 tons of tents, medicine, food and clothes arrived Wednesday afternoon, said Ade Edward, a disaster official. Four helicopters also had landed in Sikakap, a town on North Pagai island, which will be the center of relief operations.
"Finally we have a break in the weather," he said, adding that he hoped search and rescue operations would finally pick up pace. "We have a chance now to look for the missing from the sky and also to survey the extent of the damage."
Officials say hundreds of wooden and bamboo homes were washed away on the island of Pagai, with water flooding crops and roads up to 600 meters inland. In Muntei Baru, a village on Silabu island, 80 percent of the houses were badly damaged.
Those and other islets hit were part of the Mentawai island chain, 175 miles from Sumatra.
Eight Australian survivors and an American and a New Zealander arrived in the Sumatran city of Padang on today, telling of their harrowing encounter with the tsunami.
They said they were on the back deck of their anchored boat when the wall of water smashed them into a neighboring vessel, triggering a fire that quickly ripped through their cabin.
"They hit us directly in the side of the boat, piercing a fuel tank," said Daniel North, the American crew member. "Almost immediately, the captain gave the order to abandon ship and everyone got off the boat."
They clung to surfboards - anything that floated - as they washed in the wetlands and then climbed the highest trees they could find and waited for more than 90 minutes until they felt safe.
The fault line that ruptured on Sumatra island's coast also caused the 2004 quake and monster Indian Ocean tsunami that killed 230,000 people in a dozen countries.
AP