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Blood-red flood swamps village in Indonesia

Some people said the water reminded them of blood

Eleanor Sly
Tuesday 09 February 2021 10:17 EST
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"Blood-red" waters swamp Indonesian village

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An Indonesian village has been flooded red in a surreal scene due to water sweeping through a nearby batik factory on Saturday. 

The village of Jenggot, near to Pekalongan in Central Java, caused a stir on social media and Twitter was inundated with photographs and videos of the colourful water. 

One user, Ayah E Arek-Arek, expressed concern over the photo getting into “the bad hands of hoax spreaders,” while other users said that the waters reminded them of blood.  

Pekalongan is known for making batik, which is a traditional Indonesian method of creating patterns and drawings on fabric, using wax to resist water-based dyes. 

It is apparently not uncommon for rivers in Pekalongan and the surrounding area to change colour, according to Reuters. Another village north of the city was also swamped with green coloured water last month. 

Dimas Arga Yudha, head of Pekalongan disaster relief told Reuters: "The red flood is due to the batik dye, which has been hit by the flood." 

He confirmed that the photographs were genuine and added: "It will disappear when it mixes with rain after a while."

The dye was not toxic or dangerous, reported AFP. They added that officials used pumps to drain the area, clearing it in less than an hour. 

Indonesia is no stranger to flooding, especially during the rainy season, and at least 43 people were killed when a storm hit the capital Jakarta earlier in the year.

The country has previously used a technique known as cloud seeding to try and induce rain before it hits more flood prone areas. 

According to Reuters, this involves firing salt flares into the clouds from planes, in the hope that this will cause them to burst earlier than they would otherwise do. 

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