02/18/2013, 00.00
INDONESIA
Send to a friend

North Sulawesi, flooding emergency: 15 dead and thousands displaced

by Mathias Hariyadi
Several areas of Manado, the provincial capital, known as "Christian city" under water. At least 8 thousand people seeking temporary shelter, food and drinking water. The governor appeals for solidarity. But the news passed over in silence in national media and the central government has not intervened.

Jakarta (AsiaNews) - Heavy rains in the last two days in Manado, the provincial capital of North Sulawesi, have caused flooding and landslides that have killed at least 15 people and displaced thousands. The toll is still partial and some unofficial sources report 17 dead and more than 8 thousand homeless. The people fled from their homes invaded by water and mud, seeking refuge in the highest areas of the city. It is still an emergency situation with many families without food and drinking water.

This morning, the waters began to recede in many areas of the provincial capital, revealing devastating damage. Several main roads to Manado are still impassable, the houses uninhabitable and people have found emergency accommodation in tents and other makeshift shelters.

SH Sarundajang, Governor of North Sulawesi, has launched an appeal asking for full cooperation in coping with the natural disaster: experts note that similar episodes of this scale and scope have not happened in the area in decades. The first objective says the senior official, is "to ensure temporary shelter to displaced people."

What worries local authorities even more is the fact that the Manado disaster has been overlooked in Indonesia.  Not one major national news agency has reported the story, despite the seven districts submerged, victims, including four children, and thousands of homeless. The Indonesian province of North Sulawesi is home to many Christian and Catholic communities, much higher in proportion to the rest of the Muslim majority nation, the presence is such that the capital of Manado is called "Christian city " because of the high number of Protestant communities while Catholics are about 3% (in line with the national figure).

 

TAGs
Send to a friend
Printable version
CLOSE X
See also
Church leads the way in helping Vietnam cope with its educational emergency
11/03/2016 17:00
Catholic music to promote dialogue in Ambon, the city of sectarian violence
17/10/2018 13:29
Papua: Merauke archbishop escapes two Islamist attacks
03/06/2021 13:39
Indonesia has 14 new priests, a "rare opportunity" celebrated in various parishes
06/05/2017 17:03
Sulawesi: 2,600 youth take part in second Indonesian Youth Day
03/10/2016 13:39


Newsletter

Subscribe to Asia News updates or change your preferences

Subscribe now
“L’Asia: ecco il nostro comune compito per il terzo millennio!” - Giovanni Paolo II, da “Alzatevi, andiamo”