Rains trigger deadly dump collapse


Tragic outcome: Heavy machinery was deployed to search for victims following the landslide at the Bantargebang landfill in Bekasi, West Java. — AFP

A MASSIVE avalanche of garbage at the country’s largest landfill has killed at least five people and left several others missing after heavy overnight rain triggered a rubbish dump collapse, officials said.

Over 300 search-and-rescue personnel, using heavy machinery and sniffer dogs, were deploy­ed to the sprawling dump site late Sunday at the Bantar­gebang Inte­grated Waste Treat­ment Faci­lity in Bekasi, a city just outside the capital of Jakarta.

Rescuers worked cautiously amid unstable heaps of waste, said Desiana Kartika Bahari, who heads Jakarta’s Search and Rescue Office, yesterday.

She said the victims included two garbage truck drivers and two food stall sellers who had been working or resting near the landfill, while four people mana­ged to escape the disaster.

Rescuers, including police, soldiers and volunteers, were still searching for at least three people reported missing, Bahari said.

“We are still gathering data to confirm how many vehicles and workers were caught beneath the debris,” she said.

Rescue workers preparing to evacuate a victim. - AFP
Rescue workers preparing to evacuate a victim. - AFP

Photos and videos released by the National Search and Rescue Agency showed excavators digging through the collapsed mound, where garbage trucks and small food stalls were buried.

The National Disaster Manage­ment Agency’s spokesperson, Abdul Muhari, urged strict safety protocols during the search, noting that weather forecasts for the next two days indicate potential rain across Jakarta and its nearby satellite cities.

He warned that the unstable collapsed material could trigger more ground movement, putting rescue teams at further risk.

Sunday’s collapse renewed scrutiny of Bantargebang, a critical but overwhelmed landfill that receives most of Greater Jakarta’s daily household waste. The site has faced repeated warnings about capacity, prompting national efforts to overhaul Indonesia’s waste management system.

A woman in anguish after the body of a victim was recovered. — AFP
A woman in anguish after the body of a victim was recovered. — AFP

In January, a similar collapse of garbage and debris buried or trapped workers in buildings at a landfill in the Philippines, killing at least four people.

In 2005, 31 people were killed and dozens went missing after a rubbish dump collapsed following heavy rain, triggering a landslide that buried or damaged 60 houses in two West Java villages near Bandung, Indonesia.

Late last year, the government announced a two-year deadline to clear Bantargebang through an accelerated waste-to-energy project aimed at reducing chronic over reliance on open dumping.

The initiative, backed by a new presidential regulation intended to streamline licensing and encourage investment, calls for converting refuse into electrical or thermal energy. — AP

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