6.7 magnitude earthquake hits Indonesia's Sulawesi, hospitals evacuated as Palu shakes again
South China Morning Post reports that a 6.7-magnitude earthquake struck central Indonesia's Sulawesi island, sending people fleeing in and around Palu, a city of about 400,000 still recovering from the deadly 2018 quake and tsunami. Hospitals evacuated patients, some on intravenous drips, outdoors as a precaution. Scattered structural damage was reported across the area.

South China Morning Post reports that a 6.7-magnitude earthquake hit central Indonesia's Sulawesi island. The strong shaking sent people fleeing into open areas in and around Palu, a city of about 400,000 that is still rebuilding after the deadly 2018 earthquake and tsunami.
Footage from the area showed heavily damaged structures, while several hospitals evacuated patients, including some on intravenous drips, outdoors as a precaution. Initial assessments described scattered structural damage; further details on whether a tsunami warning was issued are expected to become clearer in the coming hours.
Indonesia sits on the Pacific Ring of Fire and faces regular seismic activity. Authorities warned residents about aftershocks, while the national disaster agency BNPB began deploying search-and-rescue teams to the area. The full scale of damage and humanitarian impact is expected to become clearer in the coming days.
Read next

Will the US-Iran deal unlock a $300 billion investment fund for Tehran?
Al Jazeera reports that a central element of the US-Iran deal is the status of a $300 billion investment fund designated for Tehran. The Trump administration insists the fund is not a payout for Iran's enriched uranium. The release timetable and oversight mechanism for the fund are among the deal's main points of contention.

Trump may release US-Iran deal text before Friday, Vance describes it as 'a page and a half'

Teenager accused of planning Brisbane terror attack targeting LNP over nuclear policy

US military plans permanent war-ready weapons stockpile in Australia

Former Central African Republic President Bozizé tried in absentia for crimes against humanity
