Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play. Advertisement A dam has burst south-west of the Indonesian capital Jakarta, killing at least 58 people. Witnesses said a "horrifying" flash flood of water up to 4m (13ft) deep engulfed hundreds of homes in Cirendeu in the Tangerang district. Officials say they expect the death toll to rise, and 150 body bags have been sent to the scene. An official said the Situ Gintung lake behind the dam became overloaded after hours of heavy rain. "The dam was an old dam, 16m (52ft) deep," said Ratu Atut Chosiyah, governor of Banten province, where the lake is located. "Last night, because of heavy rain, the dam could not hold back the water so it broke," she added. Thick mud is hampering rescue teams, but the waters have now begun to recede. 'Still sleeping' The incident happened at about 0200 local time (1900 GMT) in what is a popular tourist area. A surge of water laden with debris slammed into the suburb of small, poorly built houses, sweeping away cars and toppling telephone lines.

In pictures: Dam burst Dam burst felt 'like tsunami hit' "People were still sleeping and couldn't do anything," local official Danang Susanto told the AFP news agency. "Many people are still trapped and the rescue is ongoing." Television footage showed rescue workers wading through deep water and bodies being pulled from the mud. Indonesia's President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono sent his condolences to the families of the victims and officials said he was planning to travel to the scene of the disaster later in the day. Vice-President Yusuf Kalla and Welfare Minister Aburizal Bakrie have already visited. "We will provide emergency help to the victims. For those whose homes were destroyed, the government will help with the repairs," Mr Kalla told Metro TV. Sirens The decades-old dam had been holding back a lake of about two million cubic metres of water. One resident said the dam broke after the morning call to prayer. SITU GINTUNG DAM Earthen dam, made of compacted earth Built in the early 1900s under Dutch colonial rule Surrounds man-made lake on south-west edge of Jakarta Thought to have released two million cubic metres (70 million cubic ft) of water "I took all my family out of the house and I saw my neighbour with his pregnant wife drifting away. They asked for help but the water was so fast," Hamdani said. Another resident, Seto Mulyadi, said he heard a siren from the dam before water crashed into his house, breaking through all the windows and doors and leaving water 2.5m (8ft) deep. "A flash flood came suddenly and was horrifying," he was quoted as saying by the Associated Press news agency. "My house in a dreadful mess. Thank God my family is safe." One man told local media it had been "like being in a tsunami". People were screaming 'the water's coming in, the water's coming in,' and our dog was barking," a local resident told Detikcom news website. "I could hear our door being pounded on and I wondered who could it be, but it was the water."

"Rustam Pakaya, head of the Health Ministry Crisis Centre, said people in the area were being evacuated to higher ground. "About half of them are still on rooftops waiting for help," he said. South Jakarta Police chief Makmur Simbolon told AP that it was not yet known what had caused the failure of the 10m (32ft) dam, which was apparently earthen. The BBC's Katherine Demopoulos in Jakarta says the city is prone to floods and has an ageing, poorly maintained drainage system which struggles to cope with heavy rainfall. In 2007, floods in the capital left more than 50 people dead.



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