Desperation in Indonesia grows as soldiers ordered to clamp down on looting
Residents in the city of Palu have turned to looting after struggling to find food, water and other essentials as government aid has been slow, struggling to reach several areas.
Indonesian soldiers have been ordered to fire on people caught looting on the quake and tsunami-struck island of Sulawesi, a colonel said on Wednesday, after desperate survivors raided shops for food and water.
Police have already arrested dozens of people for looting in the disaster zone around the seaside city of Palu, which has been reduced to rubble.
TRT World's Natasha Hussain reports.
Local military colonel Ida Dewa Agung Hadisaputra said soldiers had now been given orders to shoot people spotted stealing from shops.
"If there is looting again, we will quickly fire a warning shot and then shoot to immobilise," he said.
"They tried to loot on the first day, when gasoline... and water were not available. Stores were also closed.
"That kind of situation caused them to loot."
"We could tolerate it (looting) on the first and second day because they needed those things," he continued. "But on the third day, they started looting things like electronic equipment."
He said every vehicle carrying supplies would now be guarded by five armed soldiers.
In many cases, police have stood by as people raided shops for vital goods in short supply following the quake, which has left over 1,400 people dead.
The UN's humanitarian office says almost 200,000 others need urgent help -- among them tens of thousands of children -- with an estimated 66,000 homes destroyed or damaged.