The impact of the earthquake and tsunami in Banda Aceh on December 26 2004.
Frans Delian/Shutterstock
Making the word smong part of the Indonesian vocabulary does not mean removing the word tsunami. Smong should be a source of pride in how local knowledge protects us from disaster.
A destroyed house in an earthquake-devastated area at Balaroa village in Palu, Central Sulawesi, Indonesia, October 11 2018. It’s reported at least 2,045 people have died as a result of earthquakes that hit central Sulawesi and triggered a tsunami.
EPA/Hotli Simanjuntak
The last two major disasters show that Indonesia needs to embrace a new chapter in its disaster risk governance.
The Floating Mosque of Palu that survived after the earthquake.
AP Photo/Tatan Syuflana
A majority of the over 24 mosques spread over Palu were damaged in the tsunami. Two of them survived, though one of them is gradually sinking.
Rescue team members rest near an earthquake-devastated area during a search for victims under the ruins of collapsed buildings in Balaroa, Palu city, Central Sulawesi.
EPA Images
Developed countries focus on technology, but lullabies can sometimes have a greater effect.
A general view of a tsunami devastated mosque in Talise beach, Palu, Central Sulawesi, Indonesia, 30 September 2018.
MAST IRHAM/EPA
Indonesia’s tsunami early warning system failed to provide adequate warnings to people in Palu.