At least 14 dead, 162 injured as 6.4 magnitude earthquake jolts Indonesia

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The death toll from a 6.4-magnitude earthquake that struck Indonesia's leading tourist island of has risen to 14, with more than 162 injured.

The strong tremor, which sent people running in panic from homes and hotels in the early morning, was followed by two strong secondary quakes and more than 60 aftershocks.

An official from Indonesia's said East district was the hardest hit with 10 deaths, including a Malaysian tourist. He says the number of casualties could jolt as data was still being collected from different locations on the island.

He said at least 162 people were injured, including 67 hospitalized with serious injuries.

"We estimate the number will keep rising because we are not done collecting data," Nugroho said.

A 30-year old Malaysian woman was among the victims, he said, adding those hurt were hit by debris.

The boost was felt some 100 km away in the bustling holiday island of Bali, although there were no immediate reports of damage there.

As authorities scrambled to price out the damage to buildings and infrastructure, leading trekking trails on the remote Mount Rinjani were closed because of landslides, according to the disaster agency.

"The earthquake was very strong… and everybody in my house panicked, we all ran outside," said Zulkifli, a resident of North Lombok, close to the epicentre. "All my neighbours also ran outside and the electricity was suddenly cut off," Zulkifli, who goes by one name, told AFP.

The epicentre of the shallow earthquake struck 50 km (30 miles) northeast of Lombok's main city Mataram, the said, far from the main tourist spots on the south and west of the island.

It said two of the aftershocks measured more than 5 on the Richter scale.

"People in East and Mataram felt the strong quake for 10 seconds, residents were panicking and running outside of their homes," Nugroho said earlier, adding people had run for open spaces like football fields.

No alert was issued, according to Indonesia's geophysics and meteorology agency.

At the holiday island's hotels, tourists raced outside as the quake struck soon after dawn.

At the Katamaran Hotel & Resort in Senggigi beach, some 30 guests gathered in the hotel lobby for around half an hour before venturing back to their rooms. "They calmed down and returned to their room once we explained the earthquake did not trigger a tsunami, everything is back to normal now," receptionist Ni Nyoman Suwarningsih told AFP.

Indonesia, an archipelago of thousands of islands, sits on the so-called Pacific Ring of Fire, a seismic activity hotspot.

It is often hit by quakes, most of them harmless. However, the region remains acutely alert to tremors that might trigger tsunamis. In 2004, a triggered by a magnitude 9.3 undersea earthquake gone to pieces the coast of Sumatra, in western Indonesia, killed 220,000 people in countries around the Indian Ocean, including 168,000 in Indonesia.

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