Heavy rain inundated portions of eastern Indonesia on Saturday, resulting in widespread flooding and mudslides that have killed at least 58, injured dozens and displaced thousands.
The Papua province borders Papua New Guinea, and the impacted Jayapura district is on the northern coast of the island.
National disaster agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho said in a statement that the town of Sentani, near the provincial capital Jayapura, was impacted the most.
He described the devastation, detailing that hundreds of homes have been submerged in "neck-high water and mud," according to ABC News.
ABC also reported that more than 4,000 people have been moved to temporary shelters.
Nugroho noted that search and rescue is still underway and that the death toll is expected to rise.
“The joint search and rescue teams are still doing evacuations and not all affected areas have been reached because of fallen trees, rocks, mud and other material,” he said.
The region's main transportation hub, Sentani airport, remains open despite other infrastructure losses such as several area bridges, according to Reuters.
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Nearby 24-hour rainfall reports include 114 mm (4.48 inches) at Sentani airport and 169 mm (6.65 inches) at a reporting station in Jayapura, about 25 km (15.5 miles) away.
Heavy rainfall over the mountains farther inland sparked mudslides and flash flooding.
“We’ve told local authorities to be careful of floods or flash floods considering forest destruction that has been happening in the Cyclops mountains,” Nugroho told Kompas TV.
In addition to being in the midst of the rainy season, enhanced showers and storms are expected to continue for another few days.
A budding tropical cyclone churning just off the coast of northeastern Australia will push even more moisture across the Arafura Sea and into Papua as it strengthens.
The deadly flooding occurred on the same weekend during which dozens of tourists were evacuated from a waterfall site on the Indonesian island of Lombok on Sunday. The evacuations were prompted after an earthquake triggered landslides in the area. Two people, including a 14-year-old boy, were killed, according to AFP.
A 5.5 magnitude earthquake was registered by the United States Geological Survey in northeastern Lombok on Sunday afternoon.

In this photo provided by National Search and Rescue Agency (BASARNAS), the agency's personnel and police carry the body of flood victim at Sentani, Papua Province, Indonesia, Sunday, March 17, 2019. Flash flood and mudslides triggered by days of torrential downpours tore through mountainside villages in Indonesia's easternmost province, killing dozens of people, disaster officials said Sunday. (BASARNAS via AP)


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