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By daytime Tuesday, the toll from the quake and tsunami was rising. Ade Edward, a disaster management agency official, said 23 bodies were found in coastal villages
-- mostly on the hardest hit island of Pagai -- and another 167 people were missing. Water in some places reached rooftops, and in Muntei Baru, a village on Silabu, 80 percent of the houses were damaged. Some 3,000 people were seeking shelter Tuesday in emergency camps, Edward said, and the crews from several ships were still unaccounted for in the Indian Ocean. The quake also jolted towns along Sumatra's western coast -- including Padang, which last year was hit by a deadly 7.6-magnitude tremor that killed more than 700. Mosques blared tsunami warnings over their loudspeakers. "Everyone was running out of their houses," said Sofyan Alawi, adding that the roads leading to surrounding hills were quickly jammed with thousands of cars and motorcycles. "We kept looking back to see if a wave was coming," said 28-year-old resident Ade Syahputra.
[Associated
Press;
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