Flood toll shoots to 65 in Assam
BREAKDOWN Authorities airdrop food packets as bridge collapses in Odisha, Manipur lead to connectivity troubles
The flood situation in the Northeast improved on Monday, but five people drowned in Assam and Manipur’s connectivity woes were compounded after a British era steel bridge on a national highway collapsed partially.
The Assam flood death toll since April is now 65 with 7.65 lakh people in 17 inundated districts still unable to return home. More than 18,900 of them are spread across 256 relief camps, officials of Assam State Disaster Management Authority said.
Officials in Manipur’s Tamenglong district said a part of the bride across river Barak along NH102 gave way on Monday morning, leaving more than 400 Imphal-bound goods trucks stranded. The bridge is about 120km west of Imphal.
NH102, which connects Imphal to southern Assam’s Silchar, is one of the two lifelines of Manipur. The other is NH2 via Nagaland, which has been cutoff since Saturday after a massive landslide took away a 150metre stretch 22 km south of Kohima.
Some goods trucks were diverted from the more popular NH2 route after Saturday’s landslide.
“We have supplies to last 24-30 days but we will have to think of alternatives if the two highways are not repaired fast,” a transport officer said. On Monday, Assam chief minister Sarbananda Sonowal asked officials to provide relief material to every flood-affected family, “even to those who are not in relief camps”. Officials in Manipur have been unable to collate flood damage data. said Odisha special relief commissioner Bishnupada Sethi. “Around 3000 relief packets have been distributed.”
The state government continued to be on alert as the low pressure area over Bay of Bengal was likely to turn into depression during the next 24 hours resulting in heavy rain .
The Bansadhara river continued to swell, crossing the danger mark near Kasinagar in Gajapati district.
Health minister Pratap Jena said special medical teams had camped in Rayagada . Several villages in north-costal Andhra’s Srikakulam and Vizianagaram districts were inundated and standing crops in