Tag Archives: floods

Scores die in flash floods in Indonesia and Timor-Leste | Indonesia

More than 70 people have died after flash floods and landslides swept through eastern Indonesia and neighbouring Timor-Leste on Sunday, authorities said, with warnings the toll could rise further.

Torrential rain wreaked havoc and destruction on islands stretching from Flores Island in Indonesia to Timor-Leste, a small nation east of the Indonesian archipelago.

The deluge and subsequent landslides caused dams to overflow, submerging thousands of houses and leaving rescue workers struggling to reach survivors trapped in the aftermath.

“There are 55 dead, but this number is very dynamic and will definitely change, while some 42 people are still missing,” Raditya Djati from the Indonesia disaster management agency spokesman told MetroTV.

A house collapses after its foundations were washed away as the Comoro river floods in Dili, Timor-Leste. Photograph: Janito DF Afonso/Reuters

Mud inundated homes, bridges and roads in the East Flores municipality, where rescuers struggled to reach a remote and badly hit area because of rains and strong waves.

In Timor-Leste, 11 were killed by floods in the capital Dili, authorities said. “We are still searching for the areas impacted by the natural disasters,” Joaquim José Gusmão dos Reis Martins, Timor-Leste’s secretary of state for civil protection, said.

The death toll and the number of injured victims could still rise, authorities warned.

East Flores deputy regent Agustinus Payong Boli estimated there were 60 casualties in his municipality.

“The majority of them, 55, are in Lemanele village. Many people died here because the village was hit by both landslides and flash floods,” he told Agence France-Presse, providing numbers not yet confirmed by national authorities.

Images from Lemanele showed engulfed houses, debris covering entire roads, fallen trees and damaged power lines.

In Lembata, an island halfway between Flores and Timor, parts of affected villages were displaced down a mountain slope and near the coastline, according to an AFP journalist on the scene. Local officials deployed heavy equipment to reopen roads that had been cut off.

Injured victims have been evacuated to neighbouring villages that were unaffected by the flash floods. Images from Lembata showed people wading barefoot through mud, evacuating victims from collapsed houses on makeshift stretchers .

Separately on Sunday, two people were killed in major floods in Bima city in the neighbouring province of West Nusa Tenggara, according to the disaster agency.

Dams in four sub-districts also overflowed, submerging nearly 10,000 houses in Bima following a nine-hour downpour, said Jati.

The floodwaters destroyed roads in Dili, Timor-Leste. Photograph: Antonio Sampaio/EPA

Fatal landslides and flash floods are common across the Indonesian archipelago during the rainy season. January saw flash floods hit the Indonesian town of Sumedang in West Java, killing 40 people.

In September last year, at least 11 people were killed in landslides on Borneo.

The country’s disaster agency has estimated that 125 million Indonesians – nearly half of the country’s population – live in areas at risk of landslides.

The disasters are often caused by deforestation, according to environmentalists.

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Parts of Australia declare natural disaster during ‘once in 100 years’ floods

Rains have been inundating communities since Thursday, but parts of the east coast tipped into crisis on Saturday as a major dam overflowed, adding to swollen rivers and causing flash flooding.

The NSW and federal government have signed 16 natural disaster declarations in areas spanning the central and mid-north coast, from Hunter Valley near Sydney to Coff’s Harbour, said NSW Emergency Services Minister David Elliott in a news conference on Sunday.

There have been no deaths reported yet — but, Elliott warned, “we are moving closer and closer to the inevitable fatality.”

“We cannot say it enough: do not put yourself in danger, do not put the agencies that are there to assist you in the event of a flood rescue in danger,” he said.

Some families were forced to evacuate in the middle of the night as rivers rose to dangerous levels, and 4,000 more people — primarily in the Hawkesbury region — may have to evacuate on Sunday, said state Premier Gladys Berejiklian at the news conference.

“This is nothing like we’ve seen since the 1960s,” Berejiklian said. In parts of the state that have been hit harder, this is a once-a-century event; in other regions like the Hawkesbury area, it’s a “one-in-50-years” event, she said.

Since Thursday, the State Emergency Service (SES) has responded to 7,000 calls for assistance and conducted more than 750 flood rescues. Thousands of emergency workers and volunteers are still on the ground, helping trapped residents.

Photos show backyards and homes half underwater and roads flooded to knee-high levels. In the mid-north town of Taree, residents rescued a cow struggling to stay afloat in rough waters; nearby, an entire house was swept away by the raging floodwaters, according to CNN affiliate Seven News.

Berejiklian urged residents to follow local guidance, stay off the roads, and heed evacuation orders if needed — even for those who live in flood-prone areas and may have experienced flooding before. “This is different,” she warned. “What we’re going through is different to what you’ve been through for the last 50 years. So please take it seriously.”

Authorities don’t know yet how many homes or infrastructure have been lost, but “the damage is substantial,” she said.

The natural disaster declaration could be further extended up the coast if the damage increases, said Elliott. The declaration allows those affected to receive financial assistance, including recovering damage to homes, subsidies for affected livestock or agriculture, and low- or zero-interest loans.

Heavy rains are expected to continue in the upcoming week, with a rain band forecast to move across the state from the west, bringing significant rainfall to he northern inland and northwestern slopes, said Agata Imielska of the Bureau of Meteorology. The worst-affected areas could see rain totals more than four times the March monthly average falling in just two days.

Wednesday will be the first day of some reprieve, with rains expected to lighten into showers.

But the cleanup operation will take many more weeks, said SES Deputy Commissioner Daniel Austin, according to CNN affiliate Nine News. Teams on the ground are expecting operations to continue “well past Easter,” and river levels will take time to recede. “We’re looking at some very long and protracted operations,” he said.

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Storms, floods and maybe tornadoes on Sunday

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Severe storms and a few tornados are possible in Nashville and much of Middle Tennessee on Sunday night, ending a month of scattershot weather that already made the region more vulnerable to flash flooding.

The National Weather Service forecasts that “a line of severe storms” will arrive in Middle Tennessee between 6 p.m. to midnight, and the western half of the state is under a tornado watch until 10 p.m. Even in areas with no tornadoes, storms are expected to bring damaging winds up to 60 mph and another 1 to 3 inches of rain.

National Weather Service meteorologist Sam Herron said any damage reported has been isolated. Parts of Middle Tennessee saw gusts of high-speed wind, flash flooding and hail. 

Current warnings and watches

Flood advisory: A flood advisory was issued by the NWS for cities in Cheatham and Montgomery counties along the Cumberland River through Thursday morning. The river is expected to swell to a crest of 43 feet. Low areas near the river could flood. 

Davidson County is under a flood advisory for the Stones River near Donelson and for the Cumberland River near downtown. 

Flash flood warning until 11 p.m.: Davidson; Maury; Rutherford; Smith; Williamson; Wilson. 

Between 1 and 2.5 inches of rain have fallen. Flash flooding is ongoing or expected to begin shortly. Turn around, don’t drown when encountering flooded roads. Most flood deaths occur in vehicles. A Flash Flood Warning means that flooding is imminent or occurring. If you are in the warned area move to higher ground immediately. Residents living along streams and creeks should take immediate precautions to protect life and property.

There is a considerable threat, NWS reported. 

Tornado watch until 10 p.m.: Giles; Lawrence; Lewis; Marshall; Maury; Wayne; Williamson; 

Severe thunderstorm watch until 10 p.m. Bedford; Cannon; Coffee; Cumberland; De Kalb; Fentress; Grundy; Jackson; Overton; Pickett; Putnam; Rutherford; Smith; Van Buren; Warren; White; Wilson. 

Flash flood watch through Monday afternoon: Franklin, Lincoln and Moore counties. 

Storm effects 

Flash flooding was reported throughout Stewart County around 7:15 p.m. 

Multiple roads were flooded across Robertson County around 7:30 p.m. 

Dickson County Schools will be reporting to class two hours late due storm damage. 

Wind speeds of up to 54 mph were measured at the John C. Tune Airport in Nashville around 7:45 p.m. 

Quarter-sized hail was spotted in southeastern Davidson into Wilson County. 

1,300 outages were reported by the Nashville Electric Service. 

Nashville weather radar

Middle Tennessee forecast

The rain may lead to sudden flooding in areas with poor drainage and is likely to swell creeks and streams immediately and cause large rivers to rise over the next few days, said meteorologist James LaRosa.

“Everything is already so wet, not just from the rain we’ve had, but also the snow,” LaRosa said. “The snow and ice that melted really saturated our soil, so whatever rain we get runs off very quickly.”

As of Sunday morning, the weather service predicted there was a 5% chance of a tornado within 25 miles of any given spot in much of Middle Tennessee and all of West Tennessee. Both Nashville and Memphis fell within this forecast area.

The weather service predicted a lower risk of about 2% reaching east to about Claiborne County.

La Rosa said Sunday storms would likely begin in the Clarksville area, which can expect heavy rainfall and possible flash flooding during the day. Nashville and surrounding counties are unlikely to see heavy rain until the afternoon and evening.

He urged Tennesseans to ensure they had a way to monitor the weather conditions throughout the night, when the storms will be at their worst.

“Have a plan to receive weather information overnight, whether it’s with your phone or weather radio,” LaRosa said. “The time is not great — overnight hours are when people are sleeping, so they aren’t weather aware — so just make sure you have an option to get weather information.”

Most of the storms should be over by daybreak on Monday, although some areas are likely to have lingering showers in the morning, LaRosa said. The weather is forecast to dry out on Monday night, followed by a 30% to 50% chance of more showers on Tuesday, then partly sunny and mostly clear skies on Wednesday.

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Deadly California storm washes out stretch of iconic Highway, floods homes

Two people are dead in California after a massive winter storm system with an active atmospheric river slammed the West Coast.

A portion of Highway 1 along the iconic Big Sur Coast had also collapsed and washed away.

In this photo provided by Caltrans, a section of Highway 1 is collapsed following a heavy rainstorm near Big Sur, Calif., on Friday, Jan. 29, 2021. A drenching storm that brought California much-needed rain in what had been a dry winter wound down Friday after washing out Highway 1 near Big Sur, burying the Sierra Nevada in snow and causing muddy flows from slopes burned bare by wildfires. (Caltrans via AP)

The storm front flooded homes, triggered debris flows and mudslides, forced evacuations and brought hazardous blizzard-like conditions to higher elevations last week, shutting off power for hundreds of thousands of residents. 

CALIFORNIA’S ‘ATMOSPHERIC RIVER’ PERSISTS AS SNOWFALL IS COMING FOR MIDWEST, NORTHEAST

One person died Friday after being trapped in a flooded storm drain system in the San Ysidro area of San Diego — reportedly near a Mexican border crossing — and another died Thursday while skiing at Mammoth Mountain, according to reports.

As heavy precipitation drenched the coastline, homes in the seaside city of Carmel were flooded when the Carmel River breached a natural sand levee.

A delivery driver passes sandbags outside a Carmel, Calif. home on Thursday, Jan. 28, 2021. The area was evacuated Thursday morning as authorities feared heavy rains could send mud and water through the neighborhood. (AP Photo/Noah Berger)

Elsewhere in Monterey County, mudflows damaged homes in Salinas and shuttered roadways. 

More than 10 inches fell in the area, and the city of Monterey received 3.46 inches, according to SFGate. 

Gov. Gavin Newsom issued an emergency proclamation on Friday for both Monterey and San Luis Obispo counties

Although fallen trees and whiteouts forced officials to close off Interstate 5 over the Grapevine and Highway 101 to travelers, California Highway Patrol (CHP) reported that a portion of Highway 1 along the iconic Big Sur Coast had collapsed and washed away.

In a Facebook post with a picture of the area, Monterey CHP officer Kyle Foster wrote warning that the “State Route 1 between MPM 40 and the San Luis Obispo county line continues to be impacted by inclement weather, debris flow, flooding, and slides.”

“This area is closed to the public. Remain clear of the area and plan alternate routes. Please continue to exercise extreme caution on rural roads, especially at night,” he cautioned.

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The state’s Department of Transportation told The Associated Press that there was no estimate on when the popular driving route would reopen.

In 2017, a mudslide closed a part of the Big Sur coastline for more than a year.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.



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