Solar Energy News  
58 Dead In Indonesia Floods And Landslides

In Uweruru village, a landslide hit on Sunday and a second followed after dusk Monday, burying several buildings, including a small mosque being used as a temporary shelter for survivors. Photo courtesy AFP.
by Arvin Fikriansyah
Palu, Indonesia (AFP) July 24, 2007
Indonesian search and rescue workers struggled in bad weather Tuesday to reach survivors in flooded and landslide-hit Central Sulawesi, as the death toll from the disaster rose to 58. The floods have affected some 36,000 people and are the latest in a string of natural catastrophes to hit Indonesia, where activists have long warned that logging and a failure to reforest denuded land will lead to repeat tragedies.

The head of the Central Sulawesi disaster control task force, Frits Abbas, said that 58 people had been killed, but the bodies of most victims were still buried under debris.

Days of heavy rains sparked floods that inundated Central Sulawesi's Morowali district on Sunday, demolishing hundreds of homes and severing transport links.

On Tuesday, two-metre (-yard) high waters also swept through Banggai district to the east, said Rustam Pakaya, from the health ministry's crisis centre in the Indonesian capital Jakarta.

The floods have affected some 20,000 people in 16 villages there, he said, while the homes of some 16,000 others in Morowali were inundated.

Entire villages remain cut off in the area, located about 1,600 kilometres (1,000 miles) northeast of Jakarta, with torrents of mud and water wiping out access bridges.

People are taking refuge in mosques and the homes of relatives, Pakaya said.

A provincial health office team travelled to the area by raft and had arrived but there were no other details immediately available from them, while the Morowali police chief was also in the area, he said.

A Hercules transport plane laden with six tonnes of medical supplies and food left Jakarta at dawn Tuesday, while three doctors travelling to the affected area from a regional hospital were stranded en route, he added.

Search and rescue efforts were hampered by flooded and blocked roads into affected areas, while poor weather made flights and sea travel dangerous, the disaster control task force's Abbas said.

"We are not even sure whether teams of soldiers and police dispatched to the area have arrived," he said.

The teams left from various towns in the region on Monday.

In Uweruru village, a landslide hit on Sunday and a second followed after dusk Monday, burying several buildings, including a small mosque being used as a temporary shelter for survivors, district police chief Sri Suharsono said.

"But we have as yet no report on the number of victims buried in this landslide," Suharsono said.

Pakaya said later Tuesday that 16 bodies had been recovered in the village and around 30 more were believed buried there, while reports of 10 deaths in a second village were being followed up.

Flooding in Central Sulawesi, where illegal logging is reported to be rampant, submerged 16 villages in May and also forced thousands to flee to higher ground. The south of Sulawesi was hit by floods in June last year, leaving 250 dead and 100 missing.

Deforestation reduces the capacity of the ecosystem to regulate water and also leads to soil erosion and landslides.

Source: Agence France-Presse

Related Links
the missing link Bringing Order To A World Of Disasters
When the Earth Quakes
A world of storm and tempest



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Emergency Committee Meets In London As UK Faces Worst Floods In 60 Years
London (AFP) Jul 24, 2007
Britain's emergency contingencies committee met Monday night to discuss further measures to combat the worst flooding in 60 years, which Prime Minister Gordon Brown linked to climate change. Large swathes of central and western England were submerged as rivers swelled and burst their banks during four days of heavy and persistent rain, leaving thousands without clean water or electricity and facing the prospect of more rain.







  • IAEA To Visit Japanese Quake-Hit Nuclear Plant, As Car Production Plummets
  • Energy Industry Gears Up For Nuclear Renaissance
  • Russian Activists Denounce Cover-Up On Nuclear Protest Attack
  • A Russian View Of The Quake-Hit Japanese Nuclear Plant

  • New Study Suggests Climate Change Could Be The Root Of Armed Conflicts
  • Western US States Swelter Under Record Heatwave
  • The Challenge Of Desertification
  • Australian Drought Turns To Flood As California Dries Out

  • Natural Disasters Hit Chinese Grain Output
  • NASA Researchers Find Satellite Data Can Warn Of Famine
  • Eat A Steak, Warm The Planet
  • Organic Farming Can Feed the World

  • Ice Age Survivors In Iceland
  • In An Evolutionary Arms Race A Bacterium Is Found That Outwits Tomato Plant's Defenses
  • Mushroom Secrets Could Combat Carbon, Enable Better Biofuels And Clean Soil
  • Bush administration accused of putting ideology above science

  • ATK Wins Another Orion Launch Abort Subsystem Contract
  • Old Space Prepares To Buy New Space As Northrop Scoops Up Scaled Composites
  • Pratt And Whitney Rocketdyne Awarded NASA Contract For J-2X Ares Rocket Engine
  • Ares Team Validates Manufacturing Processes For Common Bulkhead Demonstration



  • DMCii Wins ESA Satellite Imaging Contract
  • Campaign Prepares For Future Land-Surface Monitoring
  • Envisat Captures Breath Of Volcano
  • NASA Awards Contract For Land-Imaging Instrument

  • UCF And Holochip Announce Global Licensing Agreement For Zoom Lens Patents
  • Nature's Secrets Yield New Adhesive Material
  • Smart Fabric Biosensors Will Monitor Respiration Rate And Body Temperature In Real Time
  • BAE Systems To Produce Field Programmable Gate Array For Space Use

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement