The Borneo Post

Floods kill 165 in India, Nepal and Bangladesh

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KATHMANDU: At least 165 people have died and thousands have fled their homes as monsoon floods swept across Nepal, India and Bangladesh, officials said yesterday, warning the toll could rise as the extent of the damage becomes clear.

Three days of relentless downpours sparked flash floods and landslides that have killed at least 70 people in Nepal, 73 across northern and eastern India and 22 in Bangladesh.

Around 200,000 people are living in emergency camps in Assam in northeast India, which suffers frequent flooding during the annual monsoon rains.

Another 15,000 have had to leave their homes in the eastern state of Bihar, which borders Nepal and where one official said seven rivers were at danger levels.

Huge swathes of the state were submerged in 2008 when a river burst its banks across the border in Nepal, with the two countries trading blame for the disaster.

In Nepal, police said over 48,000 homes have been totally submerged by the floods.

As emergency workers struggled to reach far- flung areas, the country’s home ministry said another 47 people were missing, presumed dead.

The Nepal Red Cross warned that shortages of drinking water and food could create a humanitari­an crisis in the impoverish­ed Himalayan country.

“In many parts of the country there is a scarcity of safe drinking water creating a high risk of health hazards,” spokesman Dibya Raj Poudel told AFP.

“Several villages and settlement­s are unreachabl­e. Telecommun­ications, mobile phones are still not working so it is difficult to give a full assessment.”

In India, emergency workers were scouring the area hit by a massive landslide that swept two passenger buses into a deep gorge on Sunday, killing at least 46 people in the mountainou­s northern state of Himachal Pradesh.

In the neighbouri­ng state of Uttarakhan­d – which also borders Nepal – three people were killed in a landslide late Sunday triggered by heavy rains, local police official Ajay Joshi told AFP.

Bangladesh deployed troops to shore up embankment­s in the north of the country, where flooding has killed 22 people.

Local government administra­tor Kazi Hasan Ahmed told AFP up to 700,000 people had been marooned by flood waters after rivers burst their banks following days of heavy rain.

In many parts of the country there is a scarcity of safe drinking water creating a high risk of health hazards. Dibya Raj Poudel, Nepal Red Cross spokesman

“We’ve not seen such severe floods in Dinajpur since 1988,” he said, referring to the worst-hit district.

“The town protection embankment was washed away by flood water, submerging most of the main town.”

The government’s Flood Forecastin­g and Warning Centre warned that water levels in some major rivers would continue to rise over the next 72 hours, raising fears the flooding could spread.

In Nepal, the worst of the flooding was in the southern lowlands known as the Terai, the country’s most fertile region and home to much of its agricultur­e.

“We are getting reports that about 70 per cent of agricultur­e area in the Tarai is inundated,” said Shankar Sapkota, senior agricultur­al economist with the government.

“Paddy fields, vegetable plantation and fish farms have been affected but right now we cannot confirm the extent of damage.”

Nearly 150 people have been killed in Nepal since the beginning of the rainy season in late June.

The rains are now expected to shift westwards and authoritie­s in Nepal have begun evacuating 74,000 people from the area expected to be hit.

Hundreds have died in torrential rain, floods and landslides in neighbouri­ng India during the monsoon, which hits the country’s southern tip in early June and sweeps across the nation, lasting into September. — AFP

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 ??  ?? Indian soldiers evacuate villagers affected by flood in Jakhalaban­dha area in Nagaon district, in the northeaste­rn state of Assam, India. — Reuters photo
Indian soldiers evacuate villagers affected by flood in Jakhalaban­dha area in Nagaon district, in the northeaste­rn state of Assam, India. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? Nepali residents look at the water in a flooded area in the Birgunj Parsa district, some 200km south of Kathmandu. — AFP photo
Nepali residents look at the water in a flooded area in the Birgunj Parsa district, some 200km south of Kathmandu. — AFP photo

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