Eleven dead as floods swamp Jakarta
INDONESIA: Floods in Indonesia's capital Jakarta have left at least
11 people dead, authorities said Friday as murky brown waters submerged
parts of the city's business district, causing chaos for a second day.
The capital's worst floods in five years have also forced 18,000
people from their homes, the nation's disaster agency said, with many
ferried to temporary shelters on rafts.
“Floods are occurring still and since January 15, 11 people have
died, five of which from electrocution,” said National Disaster
Mitigation Agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho.
Among the dead were two children aged two and 13, said Nugroho,
adding that although waters were receding eight percent of the capital
was still inundated and a city-wide state of emergency would apply until
January 27.
The flooding caused chaos in Jakarta's upmarket downtown district,
causing hours-long traffic jams as motorists struggled to get to work
along canal-like streets.
Drivers could be seen standing miserably in raincoats, waiting for
their flooded cars to be towed away. Other vehicles lay abandoned by the
side of the road.
At the landmark Hotel Indonesia traffic circle, surrounded by office
towers, five-star hotels and shopping centres, the brown floodwaters
continued to swirl, forcing the nearby British, German and French
embassies to remain shut.
The central business district normally escapes damage in the
Indonesia's monsoonal rains but it was hit by waist-high water Thursday,
forcing some commuters to wade their way to work holding bags aloft.
Jakarta, home to 20 million people, is notorious for its traffic-clogged
streets, but the floods brought a new dimension to the commute.
“It took me two hours to get to work,” said Shinta Maharani, whose
home is just seven kilometres (four miles) from her office. “I had to
abandon the motorbike taxi and walk for 40 minutes because the road
ahead was submerged.” Many train and bus routes serving the city centre
were also suspended.
“The government is trying to keep doing emergency mitigation
efforts,” the disaster agency spokesman said. The floods were the worst
to hit the capital since 2007, when about 50 people were killed and more
than 300,000 were displaced.
Even the presidential palace was inundated by the waters, with
President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono pictured in the grounds Thursday in
rolled-up trousers as he ordered officials to ensure public safety.
Authorities raised the flood alert to its highest level Thursday,
warning that the torrential rains would not subside until the end of the
week. Indonesia is regularly afflicted by deadly floods and landslides
during its wet season, which lasts around half the year, and many in the
capital live beside rivers which periodically overflow.
AFP
|