Damaging aftershocks continue in Indonesia days after a powerful earthquake hit the island of Lombak, as the country struggles to care for the injured and displaced and the death toll rises into the hundreds.
Indonesia's top security minister says the death toll from the earthquake on Sunday has risen to 319, according to The Associated Press.
The country's disaster mitigation agency says the death toll is at least 259, Reuters says. The chief of a search and rescue agency told the AP the death toll is at 227 as of Thursday.
"Casualty figures vary widely at the moment, and rescuers continue to comb through the rubble for survivors," NPR's Anthony Kuhn reports.
"The quakes have left hospitals crowded with around 1,500 injured, and thousands of displaced are living in temporary shelters, or in the rubble of homes," he says. "The military has delivered food, water and medicine, but they're still in short supply in some parts of the island."
Lombok experienced another earthquake on Thursday, an aftershock of magnitude 5.9.
The Thursday quake destroyed buildings and caused more injuries, according to several reports. It was one of hundreds of aftershocks since the original earthquake on Sunday; more are expected to hit in the days to come.
The AP reports that victims of the earthquake, many of whom are in remote areas, are struggling to find care:
"Falling rubble instantly paralyzed Mary Andoni from the waist down when Indonesia was shaken by one of its deadliest earthquakes in years. But there was nobody in her destroyed village to get her the help she needed. There were too many other injured and dead.
" 'It was overwhelming,' Andoni's 35-year-old brother-in-law, Ilham, said of the chaotic aftermath of Sunday's magnitude 7.0 quake on the island of Lombok. 'There was no way to get her out.'
"On Thursday, paramedics finally evacuated Andoni to a hospital in the city of Mataram. But her story underscores the challenges facing this devastated region: Four days after the earthquake killed hundreds of people and displaced 270,000 more, injured survivors in remote areas cut off by landslides and broken bridges are still emerging from the ruined countryside, struggling to reach the doctors they desperately need."