A new cyclone was barrelling toward Indonesia and threatened to spark more floods and landslides, authorities warned Friday, as the archipelago reeled from a storm that killed more than 200 people, including victims in neighbouring East Timor.
Tropical cyclone Odette was set to dump torrential rains on south Sumatra and other parts of the country including central Java and holiday island Bali.
While the new storm was not expected to be as destructive as cyclone Seroja, which pounded eastern Indonesia this week, the national weather agency said it had the potential to do serious damage.
“Everybody should remain alert for the potential of strong winds and heavy rains… as well as floods and landslides,” said weather agency head Dwikorita Karnawati.
Cyclone Seroja, one of the most powerful storms to hit the region in years, turned small communities into wastelands of mud and uprooted trees, sending thousands fleeing to shelters amid widespread blackouts.
The threat of a new storm came as President Joko Widodo arrived in hard-hit Lembata island Friday.
“I would like to express deepest condolences to the victims,” the leader, better known as Jokowi, said from the disaster zone. “I hope their souls will be accepted by God.”
His visit came as the death toll from the floods-and-landslide disaster rose again.
At least 165 people have been listed as dead in Indonesia.
Another 42 were killed in East Timor – a nation of 1.3 million sandwiched between Indonesia and Australia that is officially known as Timor-Leste.
More than 50 people are still missing in the two Southeast Asian nations, and disaster agency officials are still searching mountains of debris for bodies.