Foreign

The death toll in the floods which struck Indonesia last week has now climbed to more than 500, with rescue workers still battling to reach affected areas.

The floods, which were caused by a rare cyclone that had formed over the Malacca Strait, have hit three provinces and impacted some 1.4 million people, according to the government’s disaster agency.

Another 500 people remain missing, while thousands more have been injured.

Indonesia is just one part of Asia which has been hit with torrential rain and storms in recent days, with Thailand, Malaysia, and Sri Lanka all also reporting deaths.

In Indonesia, the provinces of Aceh, North Sumatra and West Sumatra have been hardest hit, with thousands still cut off and without critical supplies.

Arini Amalia, a resident from Aceh’s Pidie Jaya Regency, told the BBC the floodwaters had been “like a tsunami”.

“According to my grandmother, this is the worst, the worst in her life,” Amalia said.

Aid workers have been trying to reach people on foot and by motorcycle, as many roads are impassable to larger vehicles.

Pictures from the region show bridges washed away, roads covered in mud and debris, and logs piled high.

At West Sumatra’s Twin Bridges landmark, where floodwaters swept through and deposited enormous amounts of mud and debris, Mariana watched as excavators cleared the roads, hoping they would find her missing family members including her 15-year-old son.

“Watching the excavators, seeing how thick the mud is… I keep thinking, what condition will my child be in when they find him?” she said.
”Will he still be intact?
My mother, my brother-in-law…
Looking at how it is here, maybe their faces won’t even be recognisable any more.”

BBC / Titilayo Kupoliyi

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Crime

An American woman has pleaded guilty to helping kill her mother and stuffing her body in a suitcase during a luxury holiday at a resort in Bali in 2014.

Heather Mack, now 27, was convicted in Indonesia in 2015 and sentenced to 10 years in prison but was released in 2021.

She was arrested immediately upon arriving in the US and charged with conspiracy to kill a US national and obstruction of justice.

Ms Mack now faces decades in prison.

She had originally pleaded not guilty to the charges when she was returned to the US in November 2021.

In court documents, prosecutors said that the charges against her in the US do not violate rules against prosecuting someone twice for the same crime, partly because the US has charged her with conspiracy – which was not part of the Indonesian case.

A trial was due to begin on 1 August. Instead, she will be now sentenced on 18 December. The deal made for her change of plea calls for a sentence of up to 28 years.

Ms Mack’s attorney told the New York Post that she decided to change her plea after a “good” deal was offered by prosecutors, who had originally been seeking a longer sentence

In Indonesia, Ms Mack had been convicted as an accessory to the murder of her mother, wealthy academic Sheila von Wiese-Mack, alongside her then-boyfriend Tommy Schaefer,

The pair was reportedly trying to gain access to a $1.5m (£1.17m) trust fund.

Indonesian prosecutors alleged that Ms Mack – who was just 18 at the time and pregnant – covered her mother’s mouth while Mr Schaefer struck her in the head with a fruit bowl. She was later discovered stuffed inside a suitcase.

Mr Schaefer, who is also named in the US indictment, remains imprisoned in Indonesia.

Some family members had argued that Ms Mack’s initial sentence in Indonesia was too lenient. At the time, the three-judge Indonesian panel said they handed down a lighter sentence because she had recently given birth to a baby.

Ms Mack reportedly had an extremely troubled relationship with her mother, with police frequently forced to respond to calls from the family’s Chicago home.

After Wiese-Mack’s murder at the hotel, Ms Mack and Mr Schaefer left the suitcase with her remains in the boot of a taxi. The driver later alerted police.

The couple was later discovered staying at another hotel in Bali.

BBC/Simeon Ugbodovon

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Sport

At least 125 people have been killed and dozens injured in a riot and a stampede at an Indonesian football stadium.

Reports say the resulting stampede, which happened on Saturday after a keenly-contested Indonesian Liga game, appears to have been triggered by the home supporters who surged into the field of play after the full-time whistle, protesting their team’s 3-2 defeat by their rivals, Persebaya Surabaya.

The issue of pitch invasion has continued to threaten the beautiful game globally following the latest tragedy at the Kanjuruhan Stadium.

The stampede was reportedly triggered by a scuffle between the security officials and angry fans who jumped onto the pitch after the score-line was confirmed as the final result.

According to East Java Police inspector, Nico Afinta, children and police officers were killed and many injured. panicked fans were trampled and crushed while trying to flee the scuffle after the police fired tear-gas to control the crowd.

The melee triggered a stampede and cases of suffocation as fans fled for an exit gate.

East Java Police Chief Inspector, Nico Afinta told reporters as per Reuters via Quint.

“It had gotten anarchic. They started attacking officers, they damaged cars,” Mr Afinta said.

“We would like to convey that… not all of them were anarchic. Only about 3,000 entered the pitch,” he said.

Culled / Titilayo Kupoliyi

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Foreign

At least 16 people were killed and more than a dozen others injured when a truck descending a remote mountain in Indonesia’s West Papua province crashed into a cliff on Wednesday.

Police said The truck, carrying 28 passengers and the driver, was said to be heading down a road in the Arfak mountains to the provincial capital Manokwari at roughly 2:00 am local time (17:00 GMT on Tuesday) when the driver lost control and crashed.

“We suspect the brakes failed, the truck lost its grip and the driver lost control,” Andre Manuputty, the deputy head of West Papua’s traffic unit, told local television station Metro TV.

When search and rescue teams arrived at the scene two hours after they first received reports of the crash, they saw some bodies strewn across the road, thrown out of the truck by the force of the impact, said local rescue official Monce Bruriy to Metro TV.

A child was among those killed, and 13 others were injured and receiving treatment at a local hospital, said Manuputty.

Some of the injured were in a critical condition, he said, adding that the road was particularly dangerous due to its steepness and the absence of proper lighting.

Deadly traffic accidents are common in the archipelago nation of 270 million people, where vehicles are often old or poorly maintained, and road rules are routinely ignored.

Earlier on February 13, 2022, many people were killed and dozens more injured after a tour bus carrying factory workers on a beach holiday crashed on Indonesia’s Java island, according to police.

In March 2021, a bus carrying dozens of passengers plunged into a deep ravine in West Java province, killing 29 people.

AFP/Olaolu Fawole

Economy

Indonesia Ambassador to Nigeria, Dr. Usra Harahap, has expressed the readiness of Indonesian government to partner Ogun State government in developing its Agro Cargo Airport.

Ambassador Harahap, who stated this at Oke-Mosan Abeokuta during a visit to Ogun State Governor, Prince Dapo Abiodun said his country was also ready to invest in modern railway.

While explaining that Indonesian investors were interested in joint ventures with Ogun State government in the area of agriculture and housing development, Mr Harahap pointed out that Indonesian companies had built landmark infrastructure in many parts of the world.

Responding, Ogun State Governor Prince Dapo Abiodun said his administration would set up an economic team to liaise with the Indonesian investors in exploring areas of interest that would be of mutual benefit to both sides.

Governor Abiodun pointed out that his administration was adopting a multi dimensional transportation system that would help in fast tracking the economy growth of the state.

He expressed optimism that Indonesia would work with his administration in achieving its objectives in the transportation sector.

Bolanle Adesida

Foreign

A Sriwijaya Air jet carrying 62 people lost contact with air traffic controllers minutes after taking off from Indonesia’s capital on a domestic flight on Saturday, and debris found by fishermen was being examined to see if it was from the missing plane, officials said.

Transportation Minister Budi Karya Sumadi said Flight SJ182 was delayed for an hour before it took off at 2:36 p.m. The Boeing 737-500 disappeared from radar four minutes later, after the pilot contacted air traffic control to ascend to an altitude of 29,000 feet (8,839 meters), he said.

The airline said in a statement that the plane was on an estimated 90-minute flight from Jakarta to Pontianak, the capital of West Kalimantan province on Indonesia’s Borneo island. The plane was carrying 50 passengers and 12 crew members, all Indonesian nationals, including six extra crew for another trip.

Sumadi said a dozen vessels, including four warships, were deployed in a search-and-rescue operation centered between Lancang island and Laki island, part of the Thousand Islands chain just north of Jakarta.

Bambang Suryo Aji, the National Search and Rescue Agency’s deputy head of operations and preparedness, said rescuers collected plane debris and clothes that were found by fishermen. They handed the items over to the National Transportation Safety Committee for further investigation to determine whether they were from the missing plane.

A commander of one of the search-and-rescue ships who goes by a single name, Eko, said that fishermen found cables and pieces of metal in the water.

“The fishermen told us that they found them shortly after they heard an explosion like the sound of thunder,” Eko was quoted by TVOne as saying, adding that aviation fuel was found in the location where the fishermen found the debris.

Aji said no radio beacon signal had been detected from the 26-year-old plane. He said his agency was investigating why the plane’s emergency locator transmitter, or ELT, was not transmitting a signal that could confirm whether it had crashed.

“The satellite system owned by neighboring Australia also did not pick up on the ELT signal from the missing plane,” Aji said.

Tracking service Flightradar24 said on its Twitter feed that Flight SJ182 lost more than 10,000 feet (3,048 meters) of altitude in less than a minute, about four minutes after takeoff.

Television footage showed relatives and friends of people aboard the plane weeping, praying and hugging each other as they waited at airports in Jakarta and Pontianak.

Chicago-based Boeing said on its Twitter feed that it was aware of the incident. It said it was closely monitoring the situation and “working to gather more information.”

The twin-engine, single aisle Boeing 737 is one of the world’s most popular planes for short and medium-haul flights. The 737-500 is a shorter version of the widely used 737 model. Airlines began using this type of plane in the 1990s, with production ending two decades ago.

Sriwijaya began operations in 2003 and flies to more than 50 destinations in Indonesia and a handful of nearby countries, according to its website. Its fleet includes a variety of 737 variants as well as the regional ATR 72 twin-engine turboprop plane.

The airline has had a solid safety record until now, with no onboard casualties in four incidents recorded on the Aviation Safety Network database, though a farmer was killed when a Boeing 737-200 left the runway in 2008 following a hydraulic problem.

Indonesia, the world’s largest archipelago nation, with more than 260 million people, has been plagued by transportation accidents on land, sea and air because of overcrowding on ferries, aging infrastructure and poorly enforced safety standards.

In October 2018, a Boeing 737 MAX 8 jet operated by Lion Air plunged into the Java Sea just minutes after taking off from Jakarta, killing all 189 people on board. The plane involved in Saturday’s incident did not have the automated flight-control system that played a role in the Lion Air crash and another crash of a 737 MAX 8 jet in Ethiopia five months later, leading to the grounding of the MAX 8 for 20 months.

The Lion Air crash was Indonesia’s worst airline disaster since 1997, when 234 people were killed on a Garuda airlines flight near Medan on Sumatra island. In December 2014, an AirAsia flight from the Indonesian city of Surabaya to Singapore plunged into the sea, killing 162 people.

Indonesian airlines were previously banned from flying to the United States and European Union for not meeting international safety standards. Both have since lifted the ban, citing improvement in aviation safety and greater compliance with international standards.

Associated Press

Economy

Federal Government is to collaborate with the Indonesian Government to address infrastructural challenges in both countries.

Director-General, Infrastructure Concession Regulatory Commission (ICRC) Engr. Chid Izuwah made this known when he received the Indonesian Ambassador to Nigeria Mr Usra Harahap in Abuja.

Mr Izuwah however expressed happiness for the government of Indonesian to embarking on a mission aimed  at  exploring areas of collaboration between the ICRC and Indonesian private entities on Public-Private Partnership  (PPP) projects amidst COVID-19, describing it as a great opportunity to the county.

Mr Izuwah who reiterated the commitment of President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration to bring about infrastructural development, added that the partnership will address some challenges in the areas of sustainable power, educational, urban transport systems, housing, healthcare facilities among others.

The Indonesian Ambassador to Nigeria Mr Usra Harahap said the visit was aimed at working closely with Nigeria for accelerated rapid development for the common interests of both countries.

Hassan Hussein/FRCN Abuja