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Aerial footage from Indonesia’s National Disaster Mitigation Agency reveals the staggering scale of devastation across Aceh Tamiang district, where entire neighborhoods are submerged under a vast expanse of brown floodwaters. Rescuers are still struggling to reach remote communities hit by catastrophic floods and landslides that have already killed 604 people across Sumatra, with officials warning that the toll will rise as hundreds remain missing.

The disaster, driven by relentless storms across Southeast Asia, has left at least 464 people unaccounted for and more than 2,600 injured. Around 570,000 residents have been displaced, many trapped in isolated areas where washed-out roads, collapsed bridges, and ongoing landslides have halted ground access. Helicopters have been deployed to drop food, medical supplies, and equipment to communities that emergency crews have not yet been able to reach.

In Aceh Province on Sunday, aerial video captured by government teams showed flooding stretching across miles of rural land, swallowing entire towns and farmland. Homes, schools, and marketplaces are barely visible beneath the waterline, highlighting the severity of the disaster and the difficulty rescuers face in navigating the terrain.

President Prabowo Subianto visited Padang to declare a regional emergency and announce that the government will expand airdrop operations and begin planning major infrastructure repairs. During his visit, he met survivors sheltering under makeshift tents, where he pledged to crack down on corrupt local officials in order to redirect disaster recovery funds. The crowd erupted in cheers as he called for unity and accountability during the recovery effort.

The flooding in Indonesia is part of a broader wave of destructive storms that have swept across Southeast Asia, claiming more than 1,000 lives region-wide. With power outages, contaminated water sources, and unpredictable weather hampering relief operations, authorities warn that the humanitarian needs are growing rapidly.

As helicopters continue to survey submerged districts and rescuers race against time, Indonesia faces a national tragedy of immense scale—one that will require sustained recovery efforts, expanded emergency support, and a renewed focus on infrastructure resilience in the years ahead.
 

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