<rss><channel><item><title>Indonesia: Flood victims yet to return homes</title><link>http://www.reliefweb.int/rw/RWB.NSF/db900SID/THOU-7CQ9GM?OpenDocument</link><description>The Jakarta Post , Jakarta - Some residential areas in the vicinity of the city's largest river, Ciliwung, were under two feet of water Thursday, the Jakarta administration's disaster mitigation center reported. "We have prepared dinghies in several flood-prone areas" said Basuki, an official from the center, as quoted by Detik.</description><pubDate>2008-03-14T09:49+0100</pubDate><source>reliefWeb</source><iso:language xmlns:iso="http://www.iso.org/3166">en</iso:language><guid>reliefWeb-89fa5eb8f3906e4e26fddab60c4a4959</guid><category>ManMadeDisasters</category><category>Flooding</category></item><item><title>Indonesia: Bad pumps blamed for underpass flood</title><link>http://www.reliefweb.int/rw/RWB.NSF/db900SID/THOU-7CQ9CL?OpenDocument</link><description>Mustaqim Adamrah , The Jakarta Post , Jakarta - Floods across a South Jakarta underpass occurred because automatic pumps designed to funnel floodwater to a drainage point had been blocked by water, the city public works agency said Thursday. "We placed pumps underground so when floodwater spilled....</description><pubDate>2008-03-14T09:49+0100</pubDate><source>reliefWeb</source><iso:language xmlns:iso="http://www.iso.org/3166">en</iso:language><guid>reliefWeb-695fc49c58f9c2c450f488147801708c</guid></item></channel></rss>
