The death toll from weekend flash floods and mud slides in Indonesia's West Sumatra province rose to 62 on Wednesday, authorities said, while rescuers were searching areas near rivers for 25 people who are still missing.
Officials said some of those earlier unaccounted for were found dead during the day, which lifted the toll from 58 reported in the morning.
A video shared by the national disaster management agency BNPB showed logs, rocks and mud strewn over roads, collapsed bridges and houses in Tanah Datar, one of the three districts in West Sumatra hit by the floods.
The disaster struck the area on Saturday evening when heavy rains unleashed flash floods, landslides, and cold lava flow - a mud-like mixture of volcanic ash, rock debris and water.
The cold lava flow, came from Mount Marapi, one of Sumatra's most active volcanoes. Its eruption in December killed more than 20 people and more eruptions have followed since.
BNPB will continue to search for the missing people and clean the main roads, its head Suharyanto said in a statement on Wednesday.
Indonesia's meteorology agency BMKG said it planned to try to mitigate heavy rainfall expected for the next week in West Sumatra by "cloud seeding" to prevent rains in the worst affected areas.
Widely used in Indonesia, cloud seeding involves shooting salt flares into clouds to trigger rainfall in dry areas.
Indonesia's toll rises to 62 from deadly Sumatra floods
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