Jakarta hit with deadly floods
January 1, 2020At least nine people died as Jakarta was hit with severe flooding over the New Year.
Torrential rain soaked tens of thousands of revelers as they waited for New Year's Eve fireworks in Indonesia's capital. The rains led to flooding across the city.
National Disaster Mitigation Agency spokesman Agus Wibowo said the monsoon rains and rising rivers had submerged at least 90 neighborhoods.
Thousands of people were displaced by flooding and a domestic airport was closed after water levels reached up to 3 meters (10 feet) in several places.
Wibobo said some of the deaths were due to hypothermia, but also included a 16-year-old high school student who was electrocuted by a power line.
"My son's body was covered with newspaper when my two other children passed by," the teenager's father told AFP news agency.
Rescue efforts
Indonesia's state electricity utility said it had switched off power to hundreds of districts to prevent further electrocutions.
"We're currently focusing on taking measures to ensure people's safety," Ikhsan Asaad, an official at state firm PLN, said.
Authorities have deployed about 120,000 rescuers to help evacuate those affected and install mobile water pumps. Further flooding is expected with downpours forecast for the coming day.
Read more: After the Indonesian tsunami: Cashing in on the dead
Jakarta Governor Anies Baswedan told reporters his administration would push ahead with infrastructure projects on two major rivers, including a dam and a sluice, to prevent flooding in the city of 30 million people.
This was the worst flooding since 2013 when dozens of people were killed in monsoon rains.
aw, ed/mm (AP, AFP, Reuters)
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