Floods
paralyse Indonesian capital
Heavy
monsoon rain has triggered severe flooding in large swathes of the
Indonesian capital, Jakarta, bringing the city to a halt with many
government offices and businesses forced to close because staff could
not get to work.
TVNZ,
17
January, 2013
At
least 20,000 people were forced from their homes in the capital and
weather officials warned the rain could get worse over the next few
days.
"Rain
will continue to fall in the greater Jakarta area ... the potential
for flooding remains," a spokesman for the Meteorology
Climatology Meteorology and Geophysics Agency told Reuters. He said
rain was expected to remain heavy in mountains above Jakarta, often
the source of floodwater.
Four
people were reported to have been killed, according to the National
Disaster Prevention Agency, which urged residents to stay at home to
reduce traffic congestion on blocked roads.
Torrential
rain was reported across much of the country, including the main
island of Java and heavily agricultural area of southern Sumatra.
However,
officials said there had been no reports of any serious damage to key
crops such as rice, sugar and palm oil.
An
estimated more than 175mm of rain fell in one part of west Jakarta
between 7am and midday.
"In
30 years of my life here it has never flooded, ever. This is the very
first time," said Ninuk, 30, a resident of central Jakarta.
Floods
even forced the country's anti-corruption agency to move some of its
most prominent prison inmates, including a former deputy head of the
central bank, to a notorious women's prison, Pondok Bambu, in east
Jakarta, a spokesman said.
The
flooding will put pressure on the capital's popular new governor,
Joko Widodo, who came to office last October with promises to work to
fix a huge array of basic infrastructure problems that bedevil the
city of about 10 million people.
"The
government has to do something to prevent floods... If it needs to
build stronger dykes, then build them," said Syaiful Bakhri, a
taxi driver whose car was stuck in the flood.
In
the centre of Jakarta, where streets are jammed at the best of times,
long lines of idled cars waited for waist-deep water to recede. An
inflatable dinghy provided by emergency services ferried people to
safety across water dividing the heart of the city.
The
city's main airport was open but many roads leading to it were
reportedly blocked. Most commuter trains and buses were suspended.
The Jakarta Stock Exchange did open but trading was light.
Flooding
was even reported at the presidential palace, forcing the
postponement of a meeting between President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono
and his visiting Argentine counterpart, Cristina Fernandez.

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