Not a jolly ride: A
man evacuates his family from his flooded house in the Pluit area of
North Jakarta on Sunday using a jet ski. Flood waters in the area were
up to one meter. (JP/Nurhayati)
Officers
beefed up security on Sunday in an upscale neighborhood in the
subdistrict of Pluit, North Jakarta, following a theft at a convenience
store in the area.
North Jakarta Police chief Sr. Comr. Muhammad
Iqbal said the police had arrested five people who had allegedly stole
items from a 7-Eleven convenience store earlier on Sunday.
“We will conduct security patrols for 24 hours to avoid another incident,” he told The Jakarta Post.
Iqbal
said police and army officers as well as residents had been working
together to secure the neighborhood and help evacuate residents who were
trapped in their houses by the flood.
“We’ve applied a one-gate system to patrol the area, so we can identify people who come and go,” he said.
Pluit
is one of the four subdistricts in Penjaringan, North Jakarta, badly
hit by floods since Friday evening. As many as 102 out of 267
subdistricts in Jakarta were affected by the floods on Saturday, with
the number continuing to decline the following day, according to the
National Disaster Mitigation Agency (BNPB).
Of the total 270,000 Pluit residents, more than 7,000 have evacuated to 15 shelters.
The
BNPB said the flood in Pluit occurred as the Pluit Dam could not hold
the water it had received from the Cideng River, in addition to damaged
pumps in the river itself.
“The Cideng River received a bigger
water flow due to the collapsed section of the West Flood Canal, and the
pumps didn’t work well either,” BNPB spokesperson Sutopo Purwo Nugroho
said. “The flood then worsened as the sea level also rose.”
Sutopo
said that although the floods in some areas had started to recede, he
asked people living in North Jakarta to keep alert as the sea level
might be high, with the peak estimated to occur next Thursday and
Saturday. The tides could trigger floods in some areas in North Jakarta.
Jakarta
Governor Joko “Jokowi” Widodo has ordered officials to prepare for
possible high tides, just as the Meteorology, Climatology and Geophysics
Agency (BMKG) has predicted, while ensuring the safety of those
affected by the floods.
“I want all mayors and district heads to
ensure all basic needs for flood victims at all shelters are
sufficient,” he said at City Hall.
Flooding in North Jakarta has also inundated the Muara Karang power plant.
State
power company PT PLN spokesman Bambang Dwijayanto said the inundation
would result in temporary blackouts in several parts of the city on
Monday, as the power plant supplies electricity to substations in Budi
Kemuliaan and Kebon Sirih, both in Central Jakarta.
In some
areas, floods have started to recede, but the BNPB recorded a
significant increase in the total number of evacuees, from around 18,000
to 40,425 people throughout the capital as of Sunday.
The death toll in Greater Jakarta also increased to 27 as of Sunday.
Sunday
also saw repair work almost completed on the collapsed section of the
West Flood Canal near Jl. Latuharhary in Central Jakarta.
The
canal’s section, which collapsed on Thursday, had cut off the rail track
between Manggarai station in South Jakarta and Sudirman station in
Central Jakarta.
“If all heavy machines are moved from the line
on Sunday, we can start the trial of the track and resume services on
Monday,” state railway operator PT KAI spokesman Mateta Rizalulhaq said.
All
Transjakarta corridors resumed operations on Sunday although some buses
could not reach the last stop as lanes were still flooded. The
government held a meeting on Sunday to further discuss plans to prevent
more flooding, including the opening of a new waterway that could
channel the Ciliwung River into the East Flood Canal.
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