Indonesian villagers use inner tubes to deliver supplies across a river at Banjar Irigasi in Lebak, Banten province (AFP Photo/SAMMY) |
Jakarta (AFP) - Indonesian rescue teams flew helicopters stuffed with food to remote flood-hit communities on Saturday as the death toll from the disaster jumped to 60 and fears grew about the possibility of more torrential rain.
Tens of
thousands in Jakarta were still unable to return to their waterlogged homes
after some of the deadliest flooding in years hit the enormous capital region,
home to about 30 million.
In
neighbouring Lebak, where half a dozen people died, police and military
personnel dropped boxes of instant noodles and other supplies into remote
communities inaccessible by road after bridges were destroyed.
"It's
tough to get supplies in there... and there are about a dozen places hit by
landslides," Tomsi Tohir -- the police chief of Banten province, where
Lebak is located -- told AFP.
"That
is why we're using helicopters although there aren't any landing spots."
Local
health centre chief Suripto, who goes by one name, said injured residents were
flowing into his clinic.
"Some
of them were wounded after they were swept away by floods and hit with wood and
rocks," he said.
Around
Jakarta, more than 170,000 people took refuge in shelters across the massive
urban conglomeration after whole neighbourhoods were submerged.
Map of
Jakarta showing the areas affected by flooding (AFP Photo)
|
Torrential
rains that started on New Year's Eve unleashed flash floods and landslides.
Indonesia’s
disaster mitigation agency said on Saturday that two people were also killed
after flash floods and landslides hit a village in North Sulawesi on Friday.
The agency
said Saturday the total death toll had climbed to 60 with two people still
missing.
"We've
discovered more dead bodies," said National Disaster Mitigation Agency
spokesman Agus Wibowo.
'Trauma
healing'
Jakarta
shelters filled up with refugees, including infants, resting on thin mats as
food and drinking water ran low.
Some had
been reduced to using floodwater for cleaning.
"We're
cleaning ourselves in a nearby church but the time has been limited since it
uses an electric generator for power," said Trima Kanti, 39, from one
refuge in Jakarta's western edges.
In hard-hit
Bekasi, on the eastern outskirts of Jakarta, swamped streets were littered with
debris and crushed cars lying on top of each other -- with waterline marks
reaching as high as the second floors of buildings.
People wait
to get fresh water from a truck in their flood affected village in Bekasi,
West
Java (AFP Photo/REZAS)
|
On Friday,
the government said it would start cloud seeding to the west of the capital --
inducing rain using chemicals sprayed from planes -- in the hope of preventing
more rain reaching the city region.
Water has
receded in many areas and power was being restored in hundreds of districts.
The health
ministry has said it had deployed some 11,000 health workers and soldiers to
distribute medicine, disinfectant hygiene kits and food in a bid to stave off
outbreaks of Hepatitis A, mosquito-borne Dengue fever and other illnesses,
including infections linked to contact with dead animals.
Visiting
hard-hit Lebak, Coordinating Human Development and Culture Minister Muhadjir
Effendy said the government would help rebuild destroyed schools and construct
temporary bridges, while offering assistance to victims.
"We're
also asking for NGOs (non-governmental organisations) to help with trauma
healing," Muhadjir told reporters on Saturday.
Electrocution, drowning
Around
Jakarta, a family -- including a four- and nine-year-old -- died of suspected
gas poisoning from a portable power generator, while an eight-year-old boy was
killed in a landslide.
Indonesia's
disaster agency said the death toll from the heavy flooding had
climbed to 60
(AFP Photo/BAY ISMOYO)
|
Others died
from drowning or hypothermia, while one 16-year-old boy was electrocuted by a
power line.
Jakarta is
regularly hit by floods during the rainy season, which started in late
November.
But this
week marked Jakarta's deadliest flooding since 2013 when dozens were killed
after the city was inundated by monsoon rains.
Urban
planning experts said the disaster was partly due to record rainfall.
But Jakarta's
myriad infrastructure problems, including poor drainage and rampant
overdevelopment, have worsened the situation, they said.
Indonesian
President Joko Widodo has announced a plan to move the country's capital to
Borneo island to take pressure off Jakarta, which suffers from some of the
world's worst traffic jams and is fast sinking due to excessive groundwater
extraction.)
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