The remote Indonesian town of Wasior was a scene of devastation yesterday, with bodies lying unclaimed in the debris caused by flash floods that killed at least 86 people and left dozens missing.
The seaside town’s Sanduay neighborhood was all but flattened when a wall of mud, rocks and logs hit it on Monday.
A reporter who reached the area, 240km southeast of Manokwari, West Papua Province, said hundreds of homes had been destroyed.
Military personnel joined residents and disaster response teams in search of survivors, but officials said the death toll was almost -certain to rise.
Several bodies could be seen wedged beneath rocks and logs that were washed into the town from surrounding hillsides.
Some of the logs — felled by timber workers in nearby forests — were 2m wide and left a trail of destruction as they were swept through the town by the raging flood waters.
“Earlier Monday morning there were sudden floods but on a small scale. But 30 minutes later I heard a kind of big thunder and I saw powerful waters coming from the mountain,” 50-year-old resident Wilem Imburi said.
“There was chaos and people panicked and tried to run to safety,” Wilem Imburi said.
Father-of-two Mahmud, 36, said he managed to hold on to his son, but lost his two-year-old daughter.
“I was holding my two kids when the waters came, but I didn’t have enough strength and lost grip of my daughter,” he said.
The flood carried him and his four-year-old son into the sea about 500m away from his home.
Papua search and rescue official Mochamad Arifin said at least 86 people were killed and 81 were injured in the disaster.
“We are still searching for dozens of missing people,” he said.
“The chance of survival for the missing people is slim,” he said.
Disaster Management Center official Harce Robert said about 70 people were listed as missing. Collapsed roads and bridges were hampering rescue efforts, he added.
Experts fear such events will become more common in Indonesia due to a combination of climate change, land conversion and logging, which can contribute to landslides and flash floods after monsoon downpours.
Indonesia’s climatology agency said most parts of the Southeast Asian archipelago had experienced torrential rains, strong winds, high waves and flooding due to extreme weather this year.
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