Waist-high water remained on Friday in the Gujarat state city where the main railway station and most roads were closed by the freak deluge.
About 5,000 people were evacuated from their homes as water from the overflowing crocodile-infested Vishwamitri River spread through the city of 1.2 million people.
A video of one crocodile emerging from the flood to attack a dog went viral on social media.
A #video of a #crocodile trying to attack a #dog on a #water-logged street in #Vadodara in #Gujarat has gone #viral on #socialmedia.
— IANS (@ians_india) August 2, 2019
Video: Twitter pic.twitter.com/fCiZiWVrcg
Police said two other incidents involving crocodiles in populated areas were reported.
The reptile was eventually caught by animal rights activists.
The crocodile is there since morning. Water level in society is 2.5 feet sonit is difficult to rescue the crocodile. @ahmedabadmirror @VMCVadodara pic.twitter.com/YuNzfmz7sA
— Jignesh Vora (@JigneshMIRROR) August 2, 2019
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Many bridges over the river were closed, cutting off whole districts of the city.
Officials said two people were electrocuted and two labourers died when a wall weakened by the floods fell on them. The body of a 60-year-old man was found floating in the water but the cause of death was not immediately known.
Medical teams from other cities in the western state were to be sent to Vadodara to launch operations to contain infections and disease, officials said.
Power engineers were struggling in the floods to reconnect electricity supplies. Long queues of people formed outside food shops.
More than 250 people have died in monsoon floods across India in the past few weeks, with Assam and Bihar states in the north the worst hit.
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