Indonesia landslide: 18 killed and 90 missing after rains

More than 100 houses swept away in central Java village

Indonesian rescuers search for victims after a landslide hit Jemblung village. Photograph: Himawan Listya Nugraha/EPA
Indonesian rescuers search for victims after a landslide hit Jemblung village. Photograph: Himawan Listya Nugraha/EPA

At least 18 people have been killed and some 90 others are missing after a mudslide set off by torrential rains struck a village in central Indonesia.

About 105 houses were swept away by the landslide in Jemblung village in Central Java province’s Banjarnegara district, said Sutopo Purwo Nugroho, a spokesman for the National Disaster Mitigation Agency.

Hundreds of rescuers, including soldiers, police and residents, dug through the debris with their bare hands, shovels and hoes, while others used bamboo to carry black body bags containing corpses.

About 420 residents were evacuated to temporary shelters.

READ MORE

Relatives watched in horror as residents and rescuers pulled out mud-caked bodies from the village, while distraught women screamed at a hospital, MetroTV video showed.

Mr Nugroho said some rescuers heard what sounded like calls for help coming from the debris, but that a lack of equipment had prevented them reaching possible victims.

“Mud, rugged terrain and bad weather hampered our rescue efforts,” Mr Nugroho said.

Tractors and bulldozers were later brought in to help with the rescue effort.

Eighteen bodies were pulled from the mud and the wreckage of crumpled homes, and rescuers are struggling to search for 90 people still missing, said Sutedjo Slamet Utomo, the district chief of Barnjarnegara, located about 285 miles east of the capital, Jakarta. Eleven badly injured villagers are being treated in hospital.

Residents in Jemblung village described how they were horrified by the mound of red soil that suddenly cascaded down hills and hit houses.

“It was like a nightmare. We suddenly heard a terrible roar and we were immediately fleeing from the rain of red soil,” said Wahono, one resident who survived with his four family members.

“Many failed and they were buried in the ground.”

Wahono, who like many Indonesians uses only one name, said he heard people screaming and pleading for help in the heavy rain and dark. But he said he was unable to do anything other than run with his family to safety.

The landslide was the second in several days on densely populated Java island. Mud and rocks hit Central Java’s Wonosobo district on Thursday, killing at least one villager.

Seasonal rains and high tides in recent days have caused dozens of landslides and widespread flooding across much of Indonesia, a chain of 17,000 islands where millions of people live in mountainous areas or near fertile flood plains close to rivers.

PA