The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Indian aid arrives as Sri Lanka monsoon toll hits 100

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COLOMBO: Indian medical teams and emergency relief arrived in Sri Lanka yesterday as the monsoon-related death toll reached 100 and authoritie­s warned of more flooding in low-lying areas.

A ship carrying medical supplies docked in Colombo, sent by India to help deal with the worst flooding in the island’s western and southern regions in 14 years after record rainfall.

The official Disaster Management Centre (DMC) said Saturday that the death toll from floods and a string of landslides had climbed to 100 while the number of missing since yesterday’s deluge had been revised down to 90 from 110.

Forty other people are in hospital.

Authoritie­s issued fresh evacuation orders for those living downstream of two major rivers, citing a risk of flooding even though the rains had

The monsoon has firmly establishe­d and we could have evening showers at a lesser intensity. —S R Jayasekera, meterologi­cal department chief

subsided.

“The monsoon has firmly establishe­d and we could have evening showers at a lesser intensity”, meterologi­cal department chief S R Jayasekera said.

India is sending another ship due to arrive Monday after Sri Lanka issued an internatio­nal appeal for help.

The flooding is the worst since May 2003 when 250 people were killed and 10,000 homes destroyed after a similarly powerful Southwest monsoon, officials said.

The DMC said the monsoon ended a prolonged drought that had threatened agricultur­e as well as hydropower generation.

The rains have filled reservoirs used for hydroelect­ric projects after low supplies had raised fears of power shortages in June.

But officials said most reservoirs were now so full they were in danger of spilling over and flooding communitie­s living downstream.

The flooding was caused by rivers bursting their banks, but unusually heavy rain triggered more than a dozen landslides burying homes on mountain slopes.

Over 60,000 people had been driven out of their homes while nearly 500 homes had been either damaged or destroyed.

Most of the deaths have occurred due to mountainsi­des collapsing on homes, authoritie­s say. — AFP

 ??  ?? Indian Navy troops offload emergency supplies from the Indian ship Kirch at Colombo harbour in Colombo. — AFP photo
Indian Navy troops offload emergency supplies from the Indian ship Kirch at Colombo harbour in Colombo. — AFP photo

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