Tropical Cyclone Kills at Least 76 in Indonesia, East Timor

Floods and landslides triggered by tropical cyclone Seroja in a cluster of islands in southeast Indonesia and East Timor have killed at least 76 people and displaced thousands, officials said on Monday.
There were 55 people dead and 40
missing in Indonesia’s East Nusa Tenggara province, after the cyclone brought
flash floods, landslides and strong winds amid heavy rain since the weekend,
disaster agency BNPB said.
More than 400 people were
evacuated and thousands more impacted, it said.
In East Timor, which shares the
Timor island with Indonesia, 21 people were killed by landslides, flash floods
and a falling tree, mostly in the capital Dili.
More than 1,500 people were
evacuated, Main Director of Civil Protection, Ismael da Costa Babo, told
reporters.
Several bridges collapsed, trees fell
and blocked some roads in Indonesia and at least one ship sank in high waves
triggered by the cyclone, complicating search and rescue operations, BNPB said.
Agustinus Payong Boli, deputy head
of the East Flores government, said rescuers halted evacuations because a storm
was still raging and they needed heavy equipment.
In Lembata, where at least 20
people died, authorities feared bodies had been washed away.
“We are using rubber boats to find bodies at
sea. In several villages, flash floods hit while people were sleeping,” Thomas
Ola Langoday, deputy head of Lembata district government, told Reuters by phone.
President Joko Widodo offered his
condolences and urged residents to follow the direction from field officers
during extreme weather.
“I have ordered for disaster relief efforts to
be conducted quickly and well,” he said in remarks streamed online.
The Seroja cyclone hit the Savu
sea southwest of Timor island in the early hours of Monday, Indonesia’s weather
agency said.
Within the next 24 hours, the cyclone’s intensity could strengthen, bringing yet more rain, waves and winds, although it was moving away from Indonesia, the agency said.