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The death toll in Indonesia from floods and landslides has passed 700

The disaster agency reported that the number of deaths from floods and landslides in Indonesia's Sumatra Island rose to 708 people on Tuesday as authorities raced to repair infrastructure and provide aid to areas cut off.

In a late-night press conference on Tuesday, the agency said that 708 people were killed since the last week. This is a lower number than the 753 listed on the website earlier in the morning. The agency did not explain the difference. Nearly 900 people were killed by floods and land slides that wreaked havoc on Indonesia, Malaysia, and Thailand. This follows months of severe weather conditions in Southeast Asia including typhoons which struck Vietnam and the Philippines, and frequent and prolonged flooding in other parts. Local officials and environmental experts have stated that deforestation in Sumatra is responsible for a disproportionately high death toll.

The Indonesian disaster agency stated that teams are prioritising the distribution of aid via land sea and air as well as clearing blocked roads and repairing damage infrastructure.

Abdul Muhari, spokesperson for the company, said: "We hope we can accelerate logistics distribution." (Reporting and editing by Ananda Terresia, Martin Petty).

(source: Reuters)