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Indonesian girl, 7, found dead after day-long quake rescue effort

Dicky Bisinglasi - Agence France-Presse
Indonesian girl, 7, found dead after day-long quake rescue effort
Rescue personnels carry the body of seven-year-old Indonesian girl Ashika Nur Fauziah after she was found dead under the rubble at Cugenang village, in Cianjur, on November 25, 2022. Ashika Nur Fauziah, also known as Cika, was the subject of a day-long rescue effort after an earthquake killed 272 people in West Java. Emergency workers found her body under rubble in the worst-hit district of Cianjur.
AFP / Mas Agung Wilis

CIANJUR, Indonesia — A seven-year-old Indonesian girl who was the subject of a day-long rescue effort after an earthquake killed at least 272 people in West Java has been found dead, rescuers told AFP on Friday.

Emergency workers found the body of Ashika Nur Fauziah, also known as Cika, under rubble in the worst-hit district of Cianjur town, the epicentre of the quake that triggered landslides, collapsed roofs, walls and buried victims in mounds of earth on Monday.

"The body was immediately handed over to the family," 28-year-old rescuer Jeksen Kolibu told AFP. "The family... was very sad. The mother was the one who received the body."

Dozens of rescuers had spent most of Thursday using digging tools, hammers and their bare hands to clear debris in the delicate mission, which was suspended overnight.

Cika was found under three layers of concrete on Friday morning, said Kolibu. Workers found her face down, encased by debris, with little space to breathe.

Rescuers covered her face and put her into a bodybag as her father Ahmad watched on holding his head in despair. He did not utter a word as she was handed over to him.

Cika was buried at a nearby cemetery less than an hour after being found.

At the funeral, a cleric tried to calm a visibly emotional Ahmad.

Cika was then wrapped in a white sheet and lowered into the ground by three men as exhausted volunteers and firefighters watched.

'Makes me sad'

The focus of the search had centred on her grandmother's house, across the road from the family home, where her mother believed she had been playing when the earthquake struck.

"She was playing outside, I was cooking in the kitchen, suddenly the earthquake happened, so fast, only two seconds, my house collapsed," her mother Imas Masfahitah, 34, told AFP at the scene on Thursday.

"Whatever happens, I will try to accept it," she added, crying as she held on to her daughter's sandals.

Hopes of a happy outcome had been raised following the dramatic rescue of a six-year-old boy, Azka, on Wednesday evening, which was described as a "miracle" after he survived more than two days in the rubble without food or water.

"The mother was very hopeful. Azka survived, while Cika didn't. That's what makes me sad," Kolibu said.

Before Cika was found, authorities said 39 people were still missing as the rescue effort was hindered by hammering rain and potentially deadly aftershocks.

Many of those killed in the quake were children, some in classes at school, according to officials.

More than 2,000 people were injured, 56,000 houses were damaged and more than 62,000 people were forced to evacuate to shelters, leaving many homeless without adequate supplies.

Indonesia experiences frequent seismic and volcanic activity due to its position on the Pacific "Ring of Fire", where tectonic plates collide.

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