The Citizen (KZN)

Mayhem as fresh floods hit India

HELICOPTER­S, BOATS USED TO EVACUATE Death toll rises in landslides as 60 000 seek relief.

- Kochi

Helicopter­s airlifted stranded families from rooftops and dam gates were thrown open as incessant torrential rain brought fresh havoc yesterday to the Indian state of Kerala, where about 100 people are feared dead.

Hundreds of extra troops were deployed in the southern state, a major tourist hotspot, as the government issued a “red alert” over the worst floods in decades.

State authoritie­s said the confirmed death toll was 72, but officials and media reports said up to 30 more people were feared dead yesterday in landslides and as rivers burst their banks, flooding scores of villages.

At least eight people were reported dead and 15 others, including a three-month-old infant, were trapped inside three houses hit by a landslide near an irrigation dam in Malappuram district.

Authoritie­s said many people were trapped inside their houses. More than 60 000 people have sought refuge in relief camps.

“At least 6 500 people are stranded in different parts of Kerala and the situation in three districts is particular­ly grim,” a Kerala state disaster management official said.

Kerala, famed for its pristine palm-lined beaches and tea plantation­s, is battered by the monsoon every year, but this year’s damage has been particular­ly severe.

Floods have also caused havoc in other states, including Karnataka and Madhya Pradesh.

About 540 army, navy and air forces reinforcem­ents were sent to Kerala yesterday to join the rescue effort.

The army said it had rescued scores of people with helicopter­s sent to the region. Defence forces and government boats were also used in an increasing­ly desperate rescue operation.

Authoritie­s appealed for victims to stand in open fields or on rooftops away from trees so helicopter­s were not damaged during rescue efforts. – AFP

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? AFLOAT. Indian fire and rescue personnel evacuate local residents in an boat following monsoon rains at Aluva, in the Indian state of Kerala, yesterday. The death toll in the Indian tourist spot increased to about 100 as torrential rain threatened new areas, officials said.
Picture: AFP AFLOAT. Indian fire and rescue personnel evacuate local residents in an boat following monsoon rains at Aluva, in the Indian state of Kerala, yesterday. The death toll in the Indian tourist spot increased to about 100 as torrential rain threatened new areas, officials said.

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