Bangkok Post

Flooding in Jakarta as storms hit

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JAKARTA: Parts of Indonesian capital and its suburbs were flooded after two tropical cyclones off the nation’s coast triggered extremely heavy rainfall, inundating houses in low-lying areas and forcing evacuation of hundreds of residents.

More than 200 spots of flooding were reported in Jakarta and the satellite cities of Bekasi and Tangerang with the water level in Ciliwung river that runs through the capital rising to dangerous level, according to the National Disaster Mitigation Agency.

Heavy rainfall may continue to lash the greater Jakarta area under the influence of tropical cyclone Esther in the Gulf of Carpentari­a and Ferdinand in the Indian Ocean, the Meteorolog­ical, Climatolog­ical and Geophysics Agency said on Twitter. State-owned electricit­y company PT Perusahaan Listrik Negara said more than 1,600 electrical substation­s in the flooded areas were shut down temporaril­y for safety.

At least 60 people were killed and thousands were forced to flee homes early this year in the deadliest flooding to hit Jakarta in more than a decade, during which floodwater­s rose as high as a single-storey house. President Joko Widodo has ordered the relocation of capital to Borneo island as the Jakarta metropolit­an area, home to almost 30 million people, is regularly flooded.

The city administra­tion needs to install enough pumps to drain out water from flooded areas in the event of heavy rain while building a giant dyke on the northern coastline of Jakarta to keep tides from inundating the capital, said Chay Asdak, a hydrologis­t at University of Padjadjara­n in Bandung.

The flooding disrupted normal life in the city with some schools closed and rail and bus operations partially hit. PT Jasa Marga diverted traffic from two toll roads connecting the capital to its suburbs following water-logging of the highways, the company said in a statement.

Jakarta administra­tion suspended the traffic restrictio­ns on its main streets for the day after the meteorolog­ical bureau recorded more than 200 millimetre­s of rainfall in some areas, showers considered as extreme by the forecaster.

While heavy rainfall may continue to lash Jakarta until March 1, the rest of Indonesia may have an extended wet period through mid March, Dwikorita Karnawati, head of Indonesia’s Meteorolog­ical, Climatolog­ical and Geophysics Agency, said in a televised address.

The rains may cause flash floods and landslides, she said.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A cyclist rides alongside motorcycli­sts along a flooded street in Jakarta yesterday.
REUTERS A cyclist rides alongside motorcycli­sts along a flooded street in Jakarta yesterday.

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