The Borneo Post

Flash floods kill 37 in India’s tourist hotspot Kerala

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NEW DELHI: Flash floods in Kerala have killed 37 people and displaced around 36,000, Indian officials said Saturday, after heavy monsoons led to landslides and overflowin­g reservoirs across the southern state.

Kerala, famed for its pristine palm-lined beaches and tea plantation­s, is battered by the monsoon every year but the rains have been particular­ly severe this season.

Those forced from their homes ‘have moved to 350 relief camps across the state’, an official at the Kerala State Disaster Management control room told AFP.

The army has been roped in for rescue efforts in Kerala after two days of heavy rain drove authoritie­s to open the shutters of 27 reservoirs to drain out the excess water. One of the five shutters of a large reservoir in the mountainou­s Idukki district was opened for the first time in 26 years.

“Our state is in the midst of an unpreceden­ted flood havoc,” Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan wrote in a statement posted on Twitter.

“The calamity has caused immeasurab­le misery and devastatio­n. Many lives were lost. Hundreds of homes were totally destroyed,” he added, lauding the efforts of rescue teams working in the state from across India.

The US embassy Thursday advised its citizens to avoid the areas affected and monitor local media for weather updates. More than a million foreign tourists visited Kerala last year, according to official data.

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