Khabor Wala Desk
Published: 2nd December 2025, 12:39 PM
The death toll from the floods and landslides that began last week on Indonesia’s Sumatra Island has risen to at least 712, according to the National Disaster Management Agency (BNPB) on Tuesday (2 December).
The agency reported that more than 500 people remain missing across three provinces, while nearly 1.1 million people have been affected by the disaster.
North Sumatra and West Sumatra are among the worst-hit provinces. In the Tapanuli and Sibolga regions, all communications have been completely severed, making it impossible to send relief to those areas.
Although government and international aid has been dispatched by air and water, many remote villages have yet to receive any assistance. This has resulted in severe shortages of food and water, prompting some affected residents to engage in shop vandalism and food looting. Police have been deployed to maintain law and order and stabilise the situation before further aid arrives.
Local residents say many people are unwilling to leave their homes because, even after the flooding, houses, crops, and vehicles remain buried in mud. In the village of Sungai Nyalo, located around 100 kilometres from Padang, the capital of West Sumatra, road clearing has not yet begun and no external aid has reached the area.
Amid this crisis, technology entrepreneur Elon Musk has announced that Starlink services will be provided free of charge to help maintain communication networks.
Khaborwala/SS
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