10 dead, 3 missing in Indonesian floods, landslides: official

Indonesian villagers and search and rescue team members carry out the body of a landslide victim at Gumelem Kulon village in Banjarnegara on June 19, 2016.   Flash flooding and landslides in Indonesia have killed 24 and left more than two dozen missing, an official said on June 19, with mud avalanches burying people inside their homes. / AFP PHOTO / ROHMAT SYARIF
Indonesian villagers and search and rescue team members carry out the body of a landslide victim at Gumelem Kulon village in Banjarnegara on June 19, 2016.
Flash flooding and landslides in Indonesia have killed 24 and left more than two dozen missing, an official said on June 19, with mud avalanches burying people inside their homes. / AFP PHOTO / 

JAKARTA, Indonesia (AFP) — Ten people have been killed in flash flooding and landslides in Indonesia, an official said Wednesday, with a search ongoing for three others still missing in the disasters on Java island.

Torrential downpours triggered flash flooding in Garut in West Java early Wednesday, which quickly rose to around 2 metres (6.5 feet), national disaster agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho said in a statement.

He said preliminary data from the local disaster agency in Garut showed “eight people died and one person is still missing” after a river burst its banks.

Thirty others were injured in the district, four seriously, while hundreds were forced to abandon their homes as the water rose, he added.

Emergency shelters and temporary kitchens have been set up to assist those made homeless by the disaster.

Elsewhere in West Java heavy downpours caused landslides in Sumedang regency, killing two people and burying a suspected two others under an avalanche of mud and rock.

“The search for them continues,” Sutopo said.

Landslides and flooding are common in Indonesia, a vast tropical archipelago prone to natural disasters and torrential downpours.

The country’s disaster agency has warned people to be alert for disasters this wet season as a La Nina weather phenomenon threatens unseasonably heavy rain.

In June nearly 50 people died when heavy downpours sent torrents of water, mud and rock surging into villages in Central Java, another densely-populated province on Indonesia’s main island.

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