Indonesia Flood Death Toll Tops 1,000 as Prabowo Vows to Rebuild
Floods and landslides in Sumatra killed over 1,000, injured 5,400+, and displaced 1.2 million, with government suspending some corporate operations to aid recovery.
- Rescuers reported on Dec 13, 2025 that floods and landslides killed 1,003 people in north-western Sumatra over the past fortnight.
- Torrential rains triggered widespread flooding and landslides across Sumatra, one of the worst recent disasters recalling the 2004 Aceh tsunami.
- The National Disaster Mitigation Agency reported more than 5,400 injured, 1.2 million residents in temporary shelters, and 218 people still missing.
- President Prabowo Subianto said on Dec 13 the situation has improved and several areas cut off are now accessible, but flood victims have complained about the slow relief efforts.
- Reconstruction estimates show costs could reach 51.82 trillion rupiah, while the Indonesian government has so far shrugged off suggestions for international assistance.
146 Articles
146 Articles
Indonesia floods: the real risk was not foreign aid
The floods that swept through Sumatra in late 2025 were neither sudden nor inexplicable. Cyclonic rainfall, intensified by warming seas and degraded watersheds, overwhelmed Aceh and North Sumatra with predictable force. Nearly a thousand lives were lost. More than a million people were displaced. Roads disappeared, clinics emptied, and food supplies fractured under pressure. What […] The post Indonesia floods: the real risk was not foreign aid a…
Sumatra’s ‘natural’ disaster wasn’t natural: How deforestation turned a rare cyclone catastrophic
Indonesia’s government has been at pains to stress that the recent catastrophe in Sumatra was triggered by a rare meteorological event. Cyclone Senyar formed in the Malacca Strait, an area where the national weather agency notes such storms are “an extremely rare phenomenon,” before unloading torrents of rain on Aceh, North Sumatra and West Sumatra. Meteorologists say the interaction of two cyclones may have produced record rainfall over parts o…
Tropical storms and monsoon rains caused landslides and sudden floods.
The impact of the floods that devastated western Indonesia exceeded 1,000 deaths, according to the National Disaster Management Agency.
Jakarta, Indonesia. The balance after the floods and landslides in Indonesia reached 1,003 dead and 218 missing, announced Saturday the National Disaster Management Agency (BNBP).The floods, which have been in existence for two weeks in the provinces of North Sumatra, West and Aceh, also caused more than 5,400 injuries.In addition, 1.2 million displaced people are still housed in temporary shelters, the agency said on its website.Indonesia, Mala…
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