Search resumes after deadly flooding and landslides in Indonesia
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[January 22, 2025]
By NINIEK KARMINI
JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) — Indonesian rescuers retrieved two more bodies
after they resumed their search Wednesday for people missing after
floods and landslides on Indonesia’s main island of Java, bringing the
death toll to 19.
Waters from flooded rivers tore through nine villages in Pekalongan
regency of Central Java province and landslides tumbled onto
mountainside hamlets after the torrential rains Monday.
Videos and photos released by National Search and Rescue Agency showed
workers digging desperately in villages where roads and green-terraced
rice fields were transformed into murky brown mud and villages were
covered by thick mud, rocks and uprooted trees.
National Disaster Management Agency spokesperson Abdul Muhari said
flooding triggered a landslide that buried two houses and a cafe in the
Petungkriyono resort area. The disasters all together destroyed 25
houses, a dam and three main bridges connecting villages in Pekalongan.
At least 13 people injured and nearly 300 people were forced to flee to
temporary government shelters.
The search and rescue operation that was hampered by bad weather,
mudslides and rugged terrain was halted Tuesday afternoon due to heavy
rain and thick fog that made devastated areas along the rivers dangerous
to rescuers.
On Wednesday, they searched in rivers and the rubble of villages for
bodies and, whenever possible, survivors in worst-hit Kasimpar village,
said Budiono, who heads a local rescue office.
Scores of rescue personnel recovered two mud-caked bodies as they
searched a Petungkriyono area where tons of mud and rocks buried two
houses and a café. Rescuers are still searching for seven people
reported missing.
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In this undated photo released by Indonesia's National Disaster
Management Agency (BNPB) on Wednesday, Jan. 22, 2025, rescuers carry
the body of a victim of flash flood which triggered a landslide, in
Pekalongan, Central Java, Indonesia. (BNPB via AP)
Landslides and floods were also reported in many other provinces,
Muhari said. On Monday, a landslide hit five houses in Denpasar on
the tourist island of Bali, killing four people and leaving one
missing.
Heavy seasonal rain from about October to March frequently causes
flooding and landslides in Indonesia, an archipelago of 17,000
islands where millions of people live in mountainous areas or near
fertile floodplains.
The British Geological Survey defines a landslide as a mass movement
of material, such as rock, earth, or debris moving down a slope.
Landslides can happen suddenly or slowly and can be caused by rain,
erosion, or changes to the slope’s material.
Rain adds weight to the slope, making it more unstable. The slope’s
steepness or erosion at the base can make landslides more likely.
They can be caused by the movement of nearby bodies of water or
vibrations from earthquakes, mining or traffic. The types and sizes
of the rocks and soils can determine how much water land can absorb
before weakening and collapsing.
Studies have found that landslides could become more frequent as
climate change increases rainfall.
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Associated Press writer Isabella O’Malley in Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, contributed to this report.
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