Indonesian medical teams on Thursday struggled to treat scores of people injured in a 6.5 magnitude earthquake a day after over 100 people were killed in the worst disaster to hit the province.

The quake toppled hundreds of buildings and left thousands of people homeless.

The province of Aceh, on the northern tip of Sumatra Island, has declared a two-week state of emergency.

“All the victims were crushed in collapsed buildings,’’ Sutopo Nugroho, a spokesman for the national disaster management agency, said.

Rescuers in Aceh’s Pidie Jaya regency focused their search on a market complex, which suffered more damage than other parts of the town of 140,000.

The quake flattened most of the Pasar Meureudu market building, which housed dozens of shops, and rescue teams used excavators and their bare hands to pull out 23 bodies.

“It is so sad for our family, we had prepared everything,’’ Rajiati, the mother of the bride, said.

However, both she and her daughter survived.

Nugroho said many buildings in the area withstood the quake but those that collapsed were probably not built in accordance with regulations.

Experts also blamed poor construction.

According to Behzad Fatahi, a geological expert at the University of Technology in Sydney, initial information shows that single storey houses without reinforced internal brick or masonry walls have been damaged severely or collapsed.

Indonesia’s disaster agency said 102 people had been killed, with over 700 injured.

The quake was the biggest disaster to hit the province since a Dec. 26, 2004, quake and tsunami, which killed over 120,000 people in Aceh.

In all, the 2004 tsunami killed 226,000 people along Indian Ocean shorelines.

The 2004 disaster centred on its western coast near provincial capital Banda Aceh.

Wednesday’s quake hit the east coast, about 170 km from Banda Aceh.

Television images showed some patients being treated in tents in car parks because hospitals were full.

However rescue officials said aid and heavy machinery was arriving.

The Indonesian Red Cross (PMI) handed out food, water and blankets, and helped provide shelter.

“Many patients are being treated in disaster tents and we’re starting to get doctors coming in from other areas so that is a help,’’ Arifin Hadi, PMI’s head of disaster management, said.

According to the disaster agency, Indonesia sits on the so-called Pacific ring of fire and over half of its 250 million people live in quake-prone areas.

(Source: Reuters/NAN)