Indonesian rescuers try to reach Brazilian woman after fall at Mount Rinjani
The woman identified by relatives and media reports as Ms Juliana Marins, 26, went missing on June 21 at Mount Rinjani on Lombok island. PHOTO: UNSPLASH
Indonesian rescuers try to reach Brazilian woman after fall at Mount Rinjani
Indonesian rescuers tried June 24 to reach a Brazilian tourist who fell down a ravine at a volcano popular with hikers after spotting her unmoving body, authorities said.
The woman identified by relatives and media reports as Ms Juliana Marins, 26, went missing on June 21 at Mount Rinjani on Lombok island, which neighbours Bali.
Authorities think Ms Marins fell and believe they sighted her on June 23 but rescuers were held back because of bad weather.
'Yesterday morning we detected the victim. We deployed a team to the location but we were hampered by the very steep terrain and the foggy weather,' Mr Muhammad Hariyadi, head of Lombok's Mataram Search and Rescue Office, told AFP on J une 24 .
'When we detected her using a drone, she was not moving.'
Rescuers said they were using thermal drones, mountaineering gear and a helicopter in a bid to reach the Brazilian, who was backpacking around South-east Asia.
'One group is monitoring the evacuation using a thermal drone. The second team is doing the manual evacuation process with a rope as the main tool,' said Mr Hariyadi.
'This morning around 50 rescuers have been dispatched and we plan to send a helicopter team to scour the location.'
An Instagram account set up by family and friends to call for her urgent rescue has amassed more than one million followers.
'Hang in there Juliana! Help is on the way!' read a post on the account.
The Brazilian embassy in Jakarta did not immediately respond to an AFP request for comment.
Ms Marins' last posts on Instagram show her backpacking around Thailand and Vietnam before reaching Indonesia.
Lombok island is a tourist destination known for its idyllic beaches and lush greenery, and many try to climb Rinjani, Indonesia's second-tallest volcano, for its panoramic views.
In 2018 hundreds of hikers and guides became stranded by landslides on the mountain after a 6.4-magnitude earthquake struck the island. At least 17 were killed across the island including one on the mountain. AFP
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