TheJakartaPost

Please Update your browser

Your browser is out of date, and may not be compatible with our website. A list of the most popular web browsers can be found below.
Just click on the icons to get to the download page.

Jakarta Post

Two die, hundreds of homes damaged as floods hit regions

Two people have died in floods in Cilacap regency, Central Java, over the past three days

Agus Maryono and Rizal Harahap (The Jakarta Post)
Cilacap/Pekanbaru
Wed, September 21, 2016

Share This Article

Change Size

Two die, hundreds of homes damaged as floods hit regions

T

wo people have died in floods in Cilacap regency, Central Java, over the past three days. The victims were residents of Mujur village in Kroya district and Kalisabuk village in Kesugihan district, respectively.

“Both of them were swept away and drowned when crossing floodwater around their houses. We found their bodies and handed them to their families,” Cilacap Search and Rescue Agency member Gunawan told The Jakarta Post on Tuesday.

At least 300 houses in Central Java, largely in Banyumas and Cilacap regencies, were engulfed by up to 1 meter of floodwater triggered by constant downpours over the past two days. No fatalities were reported, but hundreds of people have been evacuated to safety.

Cilacap Disaster Mitigation Agency (BPBD) head Tri Komara Sidhy said the floods were caused by a number of overflowing rivers due to continuous heavy rains in the southern part of Central Java.

“Around 150 residents in Sidareja district, Cilacap, took refuge in mosques and village meeting halls,” Tri said on Monday.

Rains continue to pour over some parts of Central Java and could cause extended floods.

Floods inundated several villages in Patimuan district, where hundreds of hectares of rice fields were engulfed, putting them at risk of crop failure.

Floods in Cilacap also swamped several villages in Kroya district. In Banyumas regency, flooding hit Tambak and Sumpiuh districts where dozens of houses and hundreds of hectares of rice fields were inundated.

“If rain continues for the next couple of days, floods will definitely hit us as we are subject to flooding every rainy season,” said Sumpiuh resident Saridin, 43.

The northern parts of Riau’s eastern coast have been hit by tidal flooding since Sunday, when thousands of homes and public facilities were engulfed by water.

In Dumai, Riau, floods hit the three districts of West, South and East Dumai. The flooding is the most severe in five years, with the water level in a number of places reaching more than 50 centimeters.

“Tidal flooding is actually commonplace in coastal areas such as Dumai, but usually floods only submerge the streets, but only now seawater got into our house,” Buluh Kasap subdistrict resident Dewi Purwanti said on Tuesday.

As the area had not been hit by floods in previous years, she said she was at a loss as to how to salvage her household items.

“For the time being, I have placed them at my parents’ house which is two stories and safe from flooding, because the flooding occurs twice a day — in the morning at around 6:30 a.m. which subsides before noon, and again in the evening,” she said.

A number of streets, such as Jl. Budi Kemuliaan, Jl. Cempedak, Jl. Ombak and Jl. Sultan Syarif Kasim, were impassable to traffic due to deep puddles. On Jl. Cempedak, residents placed a barricade to prevent motorists from passing.

Floods also prompted elementary school SDN Rimba Sekampung 01 in the city to send home pupils early.

On Monday, first, second and sixth graders only attended school until 9 a.m. as lessons were stopped when water continued rising. On Tuesday, first and second graders were given the day off while sixth graders studied for a while with their shoes off.

Dumai Health Office’s disease control and environmental health affairs head Romauli warned that people were prone to contracting various diseases during tidal floods, especially children.

“They are most vulnerable to skin diseases, diarrhea and rat-borne ordi rodentia. That’s why residents are urged not to let children bathe in pools of sea water, and well water that has been contaminated by floods should not be used anymore,” he said.

Your Opinion Matters

Share your experiences, suggestions, and any issues you've encountered on The Jakarta Post. We're here to listen.

Enter at least 30 characters
0 / 30

Thank You

Thank you for sharing your thoughts. We appreciate your feedback.