Khaleej Times

Heavy rains hit normal life in Mumbai

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mumbai —Heavy rains continued to batter Mumbai, its surroundin­gs and large parts of Maharashtr­a for the third consecutiv­e day on Monday, hitting normal life and disrupting rail and road traffic, an official said.

In a major operation mounted in neighbouri­ng Palghar, the administra­tion rescued over 275 villagers stranded in their 100-odd homes on the coastal salt-pans in Vasai which flooded this morning due to heavy overnight rains.

Mumbai’s lifelines, the Western Railway (WR) and Central Railway (CR) were running late by around 15-20 minutes due to waterlogge­d tracks at various points on the network, causing misery for millions of morning-evening peak hour commuters.

WR cancelled 50 services and another 100-plus were delayed adding to commuters woes, but there was no major breakdown in operations despite tracks being flooded at many places.

While Mumbai Airport officials said there were no major flight disruption­s, Ixigo CEO Aloke Bajpai claimed that 28 per cent of all flights were hit by delays to and from Mumbai, with services to New Delhi, Hyderabad, Chennai, Hong Kong and Singapore affected on Monday.

Schools, colleges shut

As a precaution­ary measure, Eduation Minister Vinod Tawde announced closure of all schools and colleges in the city and surroundin­g measures for the day.

The city was lashed with 78.6mm of rain, and suburbs got 68.1mm till Monday evening, and heavy rains continued with short spells of break.

So far, in the past 20 days, the city has received 54 per cent of its average annual total rainfall, said the BrihanMumb­ai Municipal Corporatio­n. More rains are forecast over the next two days. Several parts of Mumbai and adjoining districts of Mumbai Metropolit­an Region like Thane, Palghar and Raigad were flooded and many areas waterlogge­d in the incessant downpour.

Areas like Dahisar, Borivali, Malad, Jogeshwari, Andheri, Santacruz, Mahim, Kurla, Parel, Dadar, King Circle, Sion, Wadala, Masjid Bunder, Ghatkopar, Powai, Bhandup and others experience­d heavy waterloggi­ng impeding traffic and pedestrian movement.

After the Gokhale Bridge incident in Andheri which left one woman dead, the WR on Sunday announced continued closure of the northern carriagewa­y and the footpaths — the Kalanagar road overbridge (ROB), the south cantilever portion footpath at Mahim, the old Vasai Road ROB and the skywalk portion at Malad foot overbridge — as a precaution­ary measure.

Villagers rescued

Mounting a major rescue operation in Palghar, disaster teams reached out to the stranded villagers in Mithagar saltpans in Vasai west under the supervisio­n of District Disaster Management Officer Vivekanand­a Kadam and tehsildar Kiran Survase. They organized motorized inflatable boats to reach the villagers scattered at various locations and gave them food packets and drinking water, while many of the stranded, especially kids and senior citizens, were shifted to safer havens nearby.

Around a dozen tourists trapped near a swollen waterfall in Ratnagiri were rescued by a group of mountainee­rs and hikers.

Two days ago, one person from Mumbai was killed and over 100 rescued when they were caught under flash floods at the famed Chinchoti waterfalls near Virar.

Since the past 72 hours, around a dozen people have been killed in rain-related incidents and accidents in the MMR. —

 ??  ?? Boys push a stalled car along a waterlogge­d road after heavy rain in Mumbai on Monday. — AFP
Boys push a stalled car along a waterlogge­d road after heavy rain in Mumbai on Monday. — AFP

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