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Families of Forgotten Bali Victims Face Future of Grief, Fear

A Balinese girl holds a picture of her father, killed in the deadly blasts in Bali

KEPAON Village, Indonesia, October 24 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) – While international attention has focused on the foreign dead and injured, families of forgotten victims of the Bali bombing are trying to come to terms with their grief in this village, which lost eight people in the deadly October 12 blast.

Relatives of the Indonesian victims of the nightclub blasts on this resort island are struggling to rebuild their lives.

Endang Isnani, 31, said she spoke to her driver husband Haris Munandar in a dream just moments before the car bombing outside the Sari Club in the Kuta resort town.

“I had a dream. I told my husband, I am taking the children to town and asked if he would follow us. He said, ‘Go ahead, I want to sleep’,” Endang told Agence France-Presse (AFP).

“Just then I was awoken suddenly. I heard a loud explosion and the ground and the walls shook.”

Neighbors came running to tell her there had been a bombing in Kuta.

Haris and seven of his friends who were waiting outside the club died in the blast. All were the sole breadwinners of their families. Five of the bodies have not been recovered.

According to the latest available figure nine Indonesians overall are confirmed dead in the bombing. But the figure is expected to rise significantly with the identification of more victims.

Haris was sleeping with the seat reclined while waiting for a passenger. “I’m sure he died in his sleep,” Endang said.

Endang, 31, now has three children and an elderly father-in-law to feed following his death. All eight victims from Kepaon were the sole breadwinners for their families.

“I just do not know what the future holds for me and my children,” she said, embracing her two-year-old son Izulhaq and struggling to hold back tears.

“I have health problems. Our lives now are in ruins.”

She described her late husband as a caring and loving person. “The kids just adored him. On weekends we were all at the beach, playing football.”

Endang said their 10-year eldest son Gharil and five-year-old Dwiga know their father has died but Izulhaq cries for “papa” every night.

With no skills to fall back on, she faces an uncertain future. She said she would take each day as it comes.

At Kepaon, three miles (five km) east of Bali’s tourist hub of Kuta, villagers remain in a state of shock. Hundreds of other villagers have joined them in prayers for the departed.

“I do not know why good people must die,” said Mohamad Harun, 60, who lost his eldest son, Fathurrahman. The 35-year-old was a driver with ice-cream manufacturer Haagen Daaz.

Warti, Fathurrahman’s 23-year-old wife, said their son Rahmat Idayat aged four cries for his father every night.

“We silence him by saying the father has gone to Jakarta,” she said as Rahmat played with his cousin.

Warti said the government had provided some financial assistance but “how are we to grapple with the severe economic conditions in the future?”

The bombing dealt a shattering blow to Bali’s vital tourism industry.

Relatives said Warti fainted when told her husband had died and she had been weeping continuously since then.

Warti said she was lost as to what work she could do and left it to God to punish the bombers.

“I do not care who did it. They are just cruel people and I hope God will end this violence.”

 

 

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