Major landfill fire finally extinguished


Burning heaps: Firefighters and members of Indonesia’s National Disaster Management Agency extinguishing smouldering remnants at the Jatiwaringin landfill in Tangerang, Banten. — AFP

A landfill fire on the outskirts of the capital Jakarta has been put out after burning for more than a week as evacuees returned home, a disaster agency spokesman said.

The Jatiwaringin landfill in the Tangerang district west of Jakarta caught fire on June 30, prompting the local government to declare a two-week emergency.

More than 230 people earlier evacuated the area and 331 cases of acute respiratory syndrome were reported, with no hospitalisations, according to the local ­disaster mitigation agency.

The fire – which burned an area at the landfill measuring around 15ha – had been completely extinguished by Thursday evening, National Disaster Mitigation Agency spokesman Abdul Muhari said in a statement yesterday.

Firefighters were carrying out an “intensive” cooling-down phase to douse the disaster site, he added.

“The joint team... remains on full alert to accelerate total ­wetting” of the burned area, Abdul said, adding that all of the evacuees had returned to their homes.

The haze from the fire as well as the water bombing by helicopters did not disrupt operations at the nearby Soekarno-Hatta International Airport.

Environment Ministry official Rizal Irawan said last week that authorities will investigate the cause of the fire, according to local media.

Indonesia’s Meteorology, Clima­tology and Geophysics Agency warned that the country’s dry season will be more intense and prolonged than average – in part due to the incoming El Nino weather ­pattern heightening risks of wildfires and droughts. — AFP

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