To check Oneindia News on your Mobile
go to:   http://m.oneindia.in/news/
  •  

Flood death toll reaches 30 in Indonesia's Sumatra

JAKARTA, Dec 24 (Reuters) Floods in Indonesia's Aceh and North Sumatra provinces have left at least 30 people dead and forced tens of thousands to flee their homes, Health Ministry official Rustam Pakaya said today.

Casualty counts were still coming in from Aceh and North Sumatra provinces, hardest hit by the heavy rains that sent streams overflowing their banks, with the downpours' effects made worse by deforestation.

The total known dead had reached 13 in Aceh and 17 in North Sumatra as of late afternoon, Pakaya said in a late afternoon telephone text message to Reuters.

A government official in Aceh Tamiang district had reported to the ministry earlier that 11 people were carried away by the raging waters and 17 houses were washed out.

In Aceh the floods have affected five districts and injured hundreds of people.

Almost exactly two years ago, on December. 26, 2004, Aceh was hit by the Indian Ocean tsunami, which left some 170,000 dead or missing in the province.

Langkat regency in North Sumatra suffered the heaviest number of deaths in that province from this month's floodings, according to officials.

Syam Sumarno, a spokesman for the regency government, blamed heavy rains that began on Friday as well as deforestation for the devastation. Lack of forest means the ground is less capable of retaining water.

In Langkat, nearly 6,000 people are in temporary residences at shelters while in Aceh the number is close to 50,000, Pakaya told Reuters earlier today by telephone.

More people were leaving their homes in mountainous areas, he added.

''They are worried that there will be landslides.'' ROADS CUT North Sumatra information agency chief Eddy Syofyan was quoted by Antara state news agency as saying some roads connecting North Sumatra and Aceh had been cut by floods.

The governor of North Sumatra, Rudolf M Pardede, has asked state oil company Pertamina to supply such community needs as kerosene at the shelters.

Relief aid was flowing to affected areas from various crisis centres, along with health services to prevent illnesses such as diarrhoea.

In Malaysia, across the trait of Malacca from Sumatra, the worst floods in 37 years have displaced nearly 100,000 people amid food shortages, looting and criticism tomorrow of the government's handling of the crisis.

Malaysian weathermen warned that the floods that hit southern states could spread to central and northeastern parts of the country if the unusually heavy monsoon rains persisted.

The rains over the Malaysian states of Johor, Negeri Sembilan, Kelantan, Terengganu and Pahang were expected to continue until today, the weather bureau has said.

As of yesterday at least six Malaysians, all in the worst-hit state of Johor, had died in the floods, which the government described as the worst since 1969.

REUTERS DKA PM1655

Somali govt forces kill 500 Islamist fighters-envoy

ADDIS ABABA, Dec 24 (Reuters) Somali pro-government forces have killed 500 Islamist troops, most of them Eritreans, in two days of heavy fighting, Somalia's ambassador to Ethiopia said today. There was no independent confirmation of the death toll. Aid agencies say dozens of people have been killed. Ambassador Abdikarin Farah told reporters in Addis Ababa the Islamists have killed 10 government soldiers and wounded 13, adding that 280 enemy fighters were taken prisoner, some of.....

First tsunami, now war Sri Lanka survivors can't win

VINAYAGAPURAM CAMP, Sri Lanka, Dec 24 (Reuters) Squatting under a makeshift shelter in a refugee camp in volatile east Sri Lanka, grating coconut for a curry as monsoon rains thunder down, tsunami survivor Kamalini Kandasamy has seen it all before. The 26-year old and her husband had expected to spend the second anniversary of the island's worst natural disaster in their rebuilt home on the tsunami-battered east coast. Instead they are on the run again.....

Remember Christ at Christmas, Pope says

VATICAN CITY, Dec 24 (Reuters) Pope Benedict urged the world today not to shut Christ out of Christmas and to banish prejudices hindering peace. Speaking at his Sunday blessing the Pope returned to a theme that has preoccupied him -- the commercialisation of Christmas. ''May his birth not find us busy celebrating Christmas forgetting that he (Jesus) is the very person at the centre of the feast,'' he told thousands of pilgrims and tourists in St,.....
User Comments
[ Post Comments ]
Be the first to comment on this article.
Oneindia  Oneindia Login