Over a thousand rescue workers are searching for survivors a day after a magnitude 6.5 earthquake rocked Indonesia, killing at least 102 people.<br /><br /> Hundreds were injured in the tremor, the biggest disaster to hit Aceh province, on the northern tip of Sumatra island, since the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami. <br /><br /> Buyung, a rescue volunteer, said:<br />“We’re focusing on searching for victims. We believe that there are five more people in this area, so probably the victims are trapped in this area.”<br /><br /> SAR look for victims of #AcehEarthquake in Meuredue today; 8 people believed trapped beneath this 12-unit 2-storey shophouse #IOMAsiaPacific pic.twitter.com/EqzVmduPtu— IOM Indonesia (@IOM_Indonesia) December 8, 2016<br /><br /> As hospitals fill up, makeshift tents have been set up to treat some patients. Thousands more have escaped uninjured, but lost their homes.<br /><br /> “Today, we are gathering our belongings,” said one resident. “Perhaps there is still something that we can save, but the stuff we cannot use anymore, we just leave it here.”<br /><br /> Currently in Bali, Indonesia’s President Joko Widodo has said he will visit Aceh soon, but has not yet given a date.<br /><br /> Drone video shows damage and rescue effort following powerful Indonesia earthquake that’s killed at least 100 people https://t.co/rLj4scXH5G pic.twitter.com/WQjvDKQ5OL— ABC News (@ABC) December 8, 2016<br />