Death toll climbs from India's monsoon floods
Flooding has risen to at least 76, officials said Monday, with eight people killed in the past day
NEW DELHI:
The death toll from severe monsoon flooding across India has risen to at least 76, officials said Monday, with eight people killed in the past day.
Heavy rain in Gujarat has claimed 11 lives since Saturday as the monsoon intensified across the western state.
"Seven of these died in the last 24 hours and at least four others are still missing," Pankaj Kumar, a Gujarat government official, told AFP.
Arunachal Pradesh and Assam in India's northeast have been the hardest-hit states, while pockets of the eastern states of Odisha and Bihar have also been affected.
Pakistan, India to share information on potential heavy rains, floods
In hilly Assam 60 people have been killed and a state-wide emergency relief operation has been underway since the wet season arrived in April.
"One person died in the last 24 hours. Thousands have been rescued and are now in 118 relief camps set up by the government across 21 affected districts," said Rajib Prakash Barua, a senior official with Assam's Disaster Management Authority.
Rains had eased in some parts of the state but five major rivers were still at danger levels, he added.
Rescue teams have also delivered grass and other feed to animals stranded in flooded sections of Assam's Kaziranga National Park, home to India's famed one-horned rhinos and other native species.
Power supplies and rail and road services have been disrupted in the five worst-hit states.
Thousands in Odisha have been badly hit by flash floods, which stranded many without basic essentials.
Met office forecasts second spell of monsoon rains today
Emergency response teams rescued at least 300 people since Sunday, including 16 pregnant women, from one of the worst-hit regions.
"Closely monitoring flood situation; every effort being made to reach the affected with food, medicines and supplies. Air sorties in full swing," Odisha's chief minister Naveen Patnaik posted on Twitter on Monday.
Parts of Arunachal Pradesh have endured some of their worst floods and landslides for years amid more than a week of incessant rain.
At least five people were killed by a landslide last week in a remote village along the border with China.
The government has called in the army to help with relief and rescue operations in some parts of the worst-hit states.
The death toll from severe monsoon flooding across India has risen to at least 76, officials said Monday, with eight people killed in the past day.
Heavy rain in Gujarat has claimed 11 lives since Saturday as the monsoon intensified across the western state.
"Seven of these died in the last 24 hours and at least four others are still missing," Pankaj Kumar, a Gujarat government official, told AFP.
Arunachal Pradesh and Assam in India's northeast have been the hardest-hit states, while pockets of the eastern states of Odisha and Bihar have also been affected.
Pakistan, India to share information on potential heavy rains, floods
In hilly Assam 60 people have been killed and a state-wide emergency relief operation has been underway since the wet season arrived in April.
"One person died in the last 24 hours. Thousands have been rescued and are now in 118 relief camps set up by the government across 21 affected districts," said Rajib Prakash Barua, a senior official with Assam's Disaster Management Authority.
Rains had eased in some parts of the state but five major rivers were still at danger levels, he added.
Rescue teams have also delivered grass and other feed to animals stranded in flooded sections of Assam's Kaziranga National Park, home to India's famed one-horned rhinos and other native species.
Power supplies and rail and road services have been disrupted in the five worst-hit states.
Thousands in Odisha have been badly hit by flash floods, which stranded many without basic essentials.
Met office forecasts second spell of monsoon rains today
Emergency response teams rescued at least 300 people since Sunday, including 16 pregnant women, from one of the worst-hit regions.
"Closely monitoring flood situation; every effort being made to reach the affected with food, medicines and supplies. Air sorties in full swing," Odisha's chief minister Naveen Patnaik posted on Twitter on Monday.
Parts of Arunachal Pradesh have endured some of their worst floods and landslides for years amid more than a week of incessant rain.
At least five people were killed by a landslide last week in a remote village along the border with China.
The government has called in the army to help with relief and rescue operations in some parts of the worst-hit states.