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Death Toll Up to 47 in Indonesia Tsunami

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JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) - A powerful earthquake sent a 6-foot-high tsunami crashing into beach resorts on Indonesia's Java island Monday, killing at least 47 people and leaving scores missing and sending thousands fleeing to higher ground, officials and witnesses said.

Regional agencies had issued bulletins that the 7.7-magnitude undersea earthquake was strong enough to send a killer wave steaming toward the country worst hit by the 2004 tsunami, but they did not reach the victims because the island has no warning system.

The hardest-hit area appeared to be Pangandaran, an idyllic beach resort long popular with local and foreign tourists, where witnesses said people shouted "Tsunami! Tsunami!" and climbed trees or crowded inland mosques as the wave approached.

Rudi Bahro, a local lawmaker at the resort, told Metro TV at least 37 people were killed at Pangandaran and "the number is still going up."

At least one person died in Puring Bay, some 60 miles to the east, said district chief Rustriningsih, adding that another 19 were missing.

Metro said nine people were killed in at least two other areas along the coast.


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