The death toll from monsoon rains in northeastern India has risen
above 60, with more than 2,000 villages inundated as rivers breached
their banks, an official said Sunday.
More than a week of heavy rains in Assam state has caused the massive
Brahmaputra river – one of Asia's largest – to exceed danger levels.
Smaller rivers have also overflown their banks.
Floods and landslides have killed 62 people, Assam's agriculture minister Nilomoni Sen Deka said.
Deka said the disaster has affected about 2 million people.
The state's disaster management authority said thousands of homes
have been destroyed and more than 480,000 people have sought shelter in
government-run relief camps.
There was no rain Sunday in most parts of the state but thunderstorms were forecast over the next 24 hours.
The monsoon season in India begins in June and ends in September.
Assam suffers flooding almost every year but this year's disaster is the worst in at least a decade.
Raging floodwaters fed by monsoon rains have inundated more than
2,000 villages in northeast India, sweeping away homes and leaving
hundreds of thousands of people marooned Friday. At least 27 people were
killed, but the toll was expected to rise.
The Indian air force was delivering food packages to people huddled
on patches of dry land along with cattle and wild elephants. Rescuers
were dropped by helicopter into affected areas to help the stranded, but
pouring rain was complicating operations.
About 1 million people have had to evacuate their homes as
the floods from the swollen Brahmaputra River – one of Asia's largest –
swamped 2,084 villages across most of Assam state, officials said.
Assam's flooded capital of Gauhati was hit by mudslides that buried
three people. Many of the city's 2 million residents were negotiating
the submerged streets in rubber dinghies and small wooden boats. Most
businesses were closed.
Officials have counted 27 people dead so far, but the toll is
expected to be much higher as unconfirmed casualty reports mount. Many
of the victims so far have drowned, including five people whose boat
capsized amid choppy waves.
Telephone lines were knocked out and some train services were
canceled after their tracks were swamped by mud. As the floods soaked
the Kaziranga game reserve east of Gauhati, motorists reported seeing a
one-horned rhino fleeing along a busy highway.
"We never thought the situation would turn this grim when the
monsoon-fed rivers swelled a week ago," said Nilomoni Sen Deka, an Assam
government minister.
Residents of Majuli – an 800-square-kilometer (310-square-mile)
island in the middle of the Brahmaputra River – watched helplessly as
the swirling, gray waters swallowed 50 villages and swept away their
homes.
"We are left with only the clothes we are wearing," said 60-year-old
Puniram Hazarika, one of about 75,000 island residents now camping in
makeshift shelters of bamboo sticks and plastic tarps on top of a mud
embankment soaked by rain.
Ratna Payeng, who was sheltering with her three small children in the camps, said she was praying for the rains to stop.
"If they don't, our land will become unfit for cultivation and everything will be lost," Payeng said.
Nearby, a herd of 70 endangered Asiatic elephants, which usually
avoid humans, were grouped together, Majuli island wildlife official
Atul Das said. "The jumbos have not caused any harm, but we are keeping a
close watch," he said.
In neighboring Nepal, landslides also triggered by monsoon rains
killed at least eight people Thursday night and left two others missing.
By Wasbir Hussain@Huffington Post World
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