Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Late deluge brings Bihar to knees, floods east UP

Hospitals waterlogge­d, hundreds including Dy CM rescued

- letters@hindustant­imes.com HT Correspond­ents ■

A late September torrential deluge pummeled large swathes of eastern Uttar Pradesh and Bihar over the past 72 hours as flood waters swamped government offices, inundated hospital wards and marooned the houses of senior politician­s. The death toll across four states stood at 138 on Monday.

The worst hit was Bihar’s capital Patna, where 1.6 million of its two million residents battled water-logging, said the state disaster relief office, exposing the city’s poor drainage and infrastruc­ture system. Many residents said they were forced to live with no power or phone lines for two days as rising waters snapped communicat­ion lines and electricit­y supply.

The showers in the city were the second heaviest in 50 years and the weather office said the bulk of the September’s rainfall was received in the past week.

“The situation is unpreceden­ted. It is like a cloudburst,” said SN Pradhan, director of the National Disaster Response Force (NDRF).

Bihar deputy chief minister Sushil Modi and his family were among 4,000 people rescued by relief personnel. Modi was seen being taken in an orange, inflatable rubber boat along with other people. Water also made its way into the residences of former chief ministers Satendra Narayan Singh and Jitan Ram Manjhi.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi said he spoke to chief minister Nitish Kumar about the floods. “Agencies are working with local administra­tion to assist the affected. Centre stands ready to provide all possible further assistance that may be required,” the PM tweeted.

Television visuals showed people wading through waistdeep water on arterial roads and flyovers partially submerged. Inflatable boats plied in several upmarket neighbourh­oods to rescue marooned residents as power connection­s were snapped.

“Nothing is working,” said Rajeshwar Rai, a retired engineer of Hanuman Nagar, one of the worst-affected localities. “There is no power since it started raining heavily. With water level rising, poisonous reptiles are crawling inside my home room, forcing my family to vacate.”

In some parts of the city, residents resorted to JCB machines owned by the municipal corporatio­n as buses and cars sank in the swirling flood waters. “We are rescuing people from several flood-affected areas here. We are trying to help the stranded senior citizens and patients by extending help,” said the JCB driver.

Gaurav Raj, a resident of Nala Road, said they were forced to live for three days with no drinking water. “Communicat­ion and power is also affected for the two days. Drainage is choked and thus water-logging level is rising.”

At least 15 other districts – most of them in north Bihar -were marooned.

 ?? PARWAZ KHAN /HT PHOTO ?? ■ A rickshaw puller carrying his passengers through a waterlogge­d road in Patna on Monday.
PARWAZ KHAN /HT PHOTO ■ A rickshaw puller carrying his passengers through a waterlogge­d road in Patna on Monday.

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