Jakarta, Jan 26, 2019 (Antara)- The Indonesian Meteorology, Climatology and
Geophysics Agency (BMKG) has warned of possible flooding as the country
is currently in the peak rainy season, but the devastation caused by
widespread flooding and landslides hitting South Sulawesi has shocked
the nation.
Flash floods believed to be the worst in the last decade affected 106
villages in 61 sub-districts in 13 districts and cities in South
Sulawesi Province. The 13 districts and cities were Jeneponto, Maros,
Gowa, Makassar, Soppeng, Wajo, Barru, Pangkep, Sidrap, Bantaeng,
Takalar, Selayar and Sinjai.
So
far, 59 were dead, 25 missing, 47 injured and 6.596 displaced due to
flooding and landslides in the province. Besides, the natural disasters
damaged 10 bridges, 79 homes, two traditional markets, 12 places of
worship, 22 school buildings, and submerged 4,857 homes, as well as
11,876 hectares of rice fields.
Jihadul
Arifin, one of the Makassar flood victims, recalled how the flash flood
took him and the other residents of Antang residential area in Manggala
Sub-district by surprise as flood waters reaching a height of 1.5
meters suddenly hit the housing complex.
"This flood is different from floods in the previous years. The flood
waters were suddenly very high," Jihadul Arifin, an inhabitant of Antang
housing complex, said on January 23, 2019.
The water current was very strong and it reached the height of an adult's chest, he added.
The flash flood came from Gowa District, which shares a border with Manggala Sub-district, after the Bili-Bili dam was opened, he noted.
The flash flood came from Gowa District, which shares a border with Manggala Sub-district, after the Bili-Bili dam was opened, he noted.
He said him and other flood victims did not have time to save their
belongings because the flash flood came without any warning on January
22 at around 4 p.m. local time.
"Other residents and I are now taking refuge at a mosque. We need food, clothes and blankets," he said.
On the previous day, parts of Makassar City were also flooded following incessant heavy rain from January 21 to 22.
The local authorities distributed relief aid and helped evacuate the
flood victims, Taufiek Rahman, head of the Makassar disaster mitigation
office (BPBD), stated.
The local BPBD deployed nine rubber boats to assist in the evacuation
process, particularly in the Kodam III and Antang Blok 10 residential
areas.
Mayor of Makassar Moh Ramdhan Pomanto urged Makassar residents to
remain vigilant during the current extreme weather that hit the city. He
appealed to residents to stay indoors if they did not have urgent
matters to tend to outdoors.
Chief of the National Disaster Mitigation Agency's (BNPB) Data and
Information Center and Public Relations Sutopo Purwo Nugroho said in a
press statement released on January 25, 2019, that flood waters began to
recede in several parts of the districts.
"The joint SAR team continued to evacuate residents and search and rescue victims," he said.
Relief
aid from several agencies continued to pour in, including from the
BNPB, the military, police and national Search and Rescue Agency
(Basarnas), the Social Service Ministry, and the Health Ministry.
The Social Affairs Ministry has channeled emergency aid worth more than Rp1.42 billion to South Sulawesi.
To feed the displaced people, the Social Affairs Ministry set up eight
public kitchens in Makassar, Gowa, Takalar, Jeneponto, and Maros
Districts.
"The public kitchens are managed by volunteers of the emergency
response unit Tagana. Each of the kitchens produces three thousand
plates of food a day," the ministry's Director General of Social
Protection and Security, Harry Hikmat, noted.
In helping the people affected by the floods and landslides, the
ministry had distributed 1,400 packs of food, 15 thousand packs of
instant noodles, a family multi-purpose tent, 300 tents, roll-windows
camping tents, 50 beds, and 100 mattresses.
According to Social Affairs Minister Gumiwang Kartasasmita, the
ministry also distributed several other goods, including 200 blankets
and 100 packs of clothes, and dispatched 450 Tagana personnel to conduct
joint rescue operations.
Currently, Indonesia is experiencing the peak of the rainy season, so
the meteorology agency has warned of possible hydrometeorological
disasters such as floods, landslides and whirlwinds.
Mulyono
Rahadi Prabowo, the BMKG's deputy in charge of meteorology, noted in a
statement on January 17, 2019 that the condition in the Indian Ocean and
the direction of wind indicated possible heavy rains, lightening,
thunder, and strong wind, he remarked.
Last year, during the January-mid December period, a total of 2,427
natural disasters hit the country, leaving at least 4,821 people dead or
missing, according to the National Disaster Mitigation Agency (BNPB).
Of
the total, 2,350 or 96.9 percent of the natural disasters were
hydrometeorological disasters such as floods, landslides, and
whirlwinds, while 76 or 3.1 percent were geological disasters.
(f001/INE)
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EDITED BY INE
(T.F001/A/BESSR/F. Assegaf) 26-01-2019 13:40:12
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EDITED BY INE
(T.F001/A/BESSR/F. Assegaf) 26-01-2019 13:40:12
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