Jakarta starts 2020 with worst floods in years

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Indonesian people wade through floodwaters in Jakarta, Indonesia, Wednesday, Jan. 1, 2020. (AP)
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Residents of Jakarta and its suburbs spent New Year’s Eve fleeing from the worst flooding the Indonesian capital has experienced in years. (Supplied)
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Updated 01 January 2020
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Jakarta starts 2020 with worst floods in years

  • State electricity company PLN had to cut off power supplies to flooded neighborhoods
  • State-owned airport operator Angkasa Pura II suspended operations at Halim Perdanakusuma Airport in East Jakarta

JAKARTA: Residents of Jakarta and its suburbs spent New Year’s Eve fleeing from the worst flooding the Indonesian capital has experienced in years, with more rainfall than the flood of February 2007 that resulted in 80 deaths and around $400 million of property damage.

Torrential rain pounded the greater Jakarta area on Tuesday and Wednesday morning, submerging residential areas, sweeping away cars, and inundating the runway of one of the city's airports. The floods have already claimed the lives of nine people and displaced thousands of others, authorities said on Wednesday.
Jakarta Governor Anies Baswedan said in a television broadcast that more than 19,000 people have fled their homes and efforts to evacuate those still trapped inside their houses were underway. He said the worst-affected areas were in East Jakarta and South Jakarta.

Agus Wibowo, a spokesman for the National Disaster Mitigation Agency (BNPB), said the floodwater reached a depth of between 30 and 200 centimeters in the greater Jakarta area, including satellites Bekasi and Tangerang.
According to the agency, at least 41 areas in Jakarta, 54 in Bekasi, and eight in neighboring Banten province have been inundated.

“Yesterday’s rainfall was very intense, more intense than normal. As much as 377 millimeters of rainfall was recorded in areas around Halim and East Jakarta. The seawater level also increased, delaying the flow of water from inland out into the sea,” BNPB head Doni Monardo said. Rainfall of 340 millimeters was recorded during 2007’s flood, according to BNPB data.

Greater Jakarta is home to about 30 million people, of whom 10 million are Jakarta residents. One of them, Acum, who lives in Kemang, South Jakarta, told Arab News: “The floods reached about one meter, up to my chest, since the rain started to pour yesterday.”
Komariah, a resident of Tegal Parang, a densely populated neighborhood in a low-lying part of South Jakarta, said that water was up to her neck. “The water went up quickly and by 3 a.m. we were inundated. It has now subsided, and we are left with cleaning the mud,” she said.

Video clips and photos circulating on social media platforms and messaging apps show that both poor and upscale neighborhoods have been affected. State electricity company PLN had to cut off power supplies to flooded neighborhoods, while commuter trains connecting Jakarta with its satellite cities have been temporarily grounded.
State-owned airport operator Angkasa Pura II suspended operations at Halim Perdanakusuma Airport in East Jakarta. All flights have been diverted to the city's main airport, Soekarno Hatta International in Banten.
Forecasts suggest that extreme weather will continue to affect Jakarta, the rest of Java, and Indonesia’s eastern provinces for the remainder of the week.

 


US immigration agent fatally shoots woman in Minneapolis, mayor disputes government claim of self-defense

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US immigration agent fatally shoots woman in Minneapolis, mayor disputes government claim of self-defense

  • A visibly angry mayor said federal immigration agents were responsible for sowing chaos in the city

MINNEAPOLIS: A US immigration agent shot and killed a 37-year-old woman in her car in Minneapolis on Wednesday amid an immigration enforcement ​surge, according to local and federal officials, the latest violent incident during President Donald Trump’s nationwide crackdown on migrants.
Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey adamantly rejected the Trump administration’s claim that the agent fired in self-defense, saying he has seen video of the shooting that directly contradicts what he called the government’s “garbage narrative.”
“They’re already trying to spin this as an action of self-defense,” he said at a press conference. “Having seen the video myself, I want to tell everybody directly — that is bullshit.”
A visibly angry Frey said federal immigration agents were responsible for sowing chaos in the city, telling ICE: “Get the f*** out of Minneapolis.” But he also urged residents to remain calm.
The shooting drew protesters into the streets near the scene, some of whom were met by heavily armed federal agents wearing gas masks who fired chemical irritants at the demonstrators.
Tricia McLaughlin, a spokeswoman for the Department of Homeland Security said ‌in a post on ‌X that the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officer began firing after a “violent rioter” attempted ‌to ⁠run ​over ICE officers.
“The ‌alleged perpetrator was hit and is deceased,” she wrote. “The ICE officers who were hurt are expected to make full recoveries.”
Frey said the woman did not appear to be trying to ram anyone in the video he had reviewed. The city police chief, Brian O’Hara, told reporters that the preliminary investigation indicated the woman’s vehicle was blocking traffic when a federal officer approached on foot.
“The vehicle began to drive off,” he said. “At least two shots were fired. The vehicle then crashed on the side of the roadway.”
Trump, a Republican, has deployed federal immigration agents to Democratic-led cities across the US through his first year in office in a crackdown against illegal immigration, leading to backlash from some residents.
The administration planned to send approximately 2,000 agents to Minneapolis, according to news reports, following allegations ⁠of wide-scale welfare fraud involving Somali immigrants, whom Trump has called “garbage.”
The identity of the shot woman was not publicly disclosed. US Senator Tina Smith, a Minnesota Democrat, said on X that she was ‌a US citizen. The police chief said the woman, who was married, was not a ‍target of immigration operations.

WITNESSES DESCRIBE SHOOTING
A dark-colored SUV with a bullet hole ‍through its windshield and blood splattered across the headrest was seen rammed into a pole on the snowy street where the shooting took ‍place.
Venus de Mars, a 65-year-old Minneapolis resident who lives near the site of the shooting, described seeing paramedics perform CPR on a woman collapsed next to a snowbank near the crashed car. Shortly after, they loaded her into an ambulance that drove away without its sirens on.
“There’s been lots of ICE activity but nothing like this,” de Mars said. “I’m so angry. I’m so angry, and I feel helpless.”
The deployment of agents to Minneapolis follows Trump’s recent attacks on Democratic Minnesota Governor ​Tim Walz and the state’s large population of Somali Americans and Somali immigrants over allegations of fraud dating back to 2020 by some nonprofit groups that administer childcare and other social services programs.
At least 56 people have pleaded guilty since ⁠federal prosecutors started to bring charges in 2022 under Trump’s Democratic predecessor, Joe Biden. Walz, the Democratic vice presidential nominee in 2024, announced this week he would not seek a third term as governor, saying he did not have time both to address the fraud scandal and to campaign.
Immigration agents have been involved in other similar shootings during the Trump administration’s crackdown.
During “Operation Midway Blitz,” Trump’s immigration enforcement surge in Chicago last fall, ICE agents shot and killed Silverio Villegas Gonzalez, a 38-year-old Mexican national in a Chicago suburb. Gonzalez, a cook and father of two with no criminal record, was shot in his car after agents attempted to arrest him.
A DHS statement said Gonzalez had steered his car at agents, dragging one officer and causing him to fire out of fear for his life. Police bodycam footage obtained by Reuters complicated that narrative, with the ICE agent saying his injuries were “nothing major.”
Border Patrol agents also shot a woman in Chicago in October. DHS said the shooting was in self-defense after the woman, Marimar Martinez, rammed into the agents’ vehicle. But her lawyer said video footage showed the agents hit her car before opening fire.
In December, ICE agents fired at a van carrying two men they were targeting for arrest, ‌leaving one with bullet wounds. A DHS statement said the men drove the van at ICE officers, prompting them to fire in self-defense.