30,000 displaced by deadly floods in Indonesian capital
Jan 21, 2014 | Extinction Protocol
INDONESIA – More
than 30,000 Indonesians have fled their homes in the capital due to
flooding that has left five dead, officials said Sunday, with people
using rubber dinghies and wading through waist-deep water to reach safer
ground. Many parts of Jakarta were under murky, brown water after days
of torrential rain produced the city’s first significant floods of the
months-long rainy season. Buildings in some parts of the sprawling
capital, which has a population of more than 10 million and is regularly
afflicted by floods, were half submerged, with roads unpassable in many
areas. “Yesterday the water was knee deep in my house,” Yulian Candra,
who lives in west Jakarta, told news website Detik. “There has also been
a power cut for the past two days.” The number of those forced to leave
their homes jumped from less than 5,000 on Saturday to more than 30,000
on Sunday after heavy rain deluged Jakarta overnight. People waded
through the floods clutching their belongings. Others used boats to make
their way to evacuation centers, which are mainly housed in mosques in
the Muslim-majority country, but also in government buildings and tents
erected on the roadside. Some motorcyclists, cyclists and cars ventured
out despite the weather, spraying up water as they drove along roads
where the floods were not yet too high. The flooding was widespread
across Jakarta, with the highest number of displaced in the south and
west of the city and floodwaters reaching up to three meters (10 feet)
in some places. Five people have so far been killed in the past week due
to flooding, disaster agency official Tri Budiarto said, adding that
those killed had either died by drowning or being electrocuted.
Flooding is a perennial problem in
Jakarta, the political and economic heart of Southeast Asia’s biggest
economy, a fast-growing, poorly planned city. “Floods continue to
inundate several areas in Jakarta,” national disaster agency spokesman
Sutopo Purwo Nugroho said. “So far, 30,784 people have been displaced in
Jakarta.” Nugroho said there were also flooding in districts
surrounding Jakarta, and other parts of Java Island. However he said the
floods were yet to reach the same level as last year, which were the
worst in five years and saw downtown commercial districts inundated.
More than 50,000 people were forced out of their homes last year, he
added. However Budiarto warned that the number of evacuees may rise in
the coming days as more rain was expected. Meanwhile on northern
Sulawesi Island, the death toll from flash floods and landslides
triggered by torrential rain earlier in the week rose to 19, an official
said. The toll rose when rescuers recovered the body of a woman from a
landslide in Tomohon city, local disaster agency chief Christian
Laotongan told AFP. He added that around 40,000 people were also still
displaced. “The floods have subsided but houses were wrecked, and
furniture and belongings were damaged, so people have not been able to
return,” he added. Indonesia is regularly affected by deadly floods and
landslides during its wet season. Environmentalists blame logging and a
failure to reforest denuded land for exacerbating the floods. –Space Daily
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