Khaleej Times

Uttarakhan­d floods block roads, sweep away bridges

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Floods unleashed by days of unseasonal heavy rain have wrecked crops, blocked roads and washed away bridges in northern Indian state Uttarakhan­d, killing at least 46 people, officials said on Wednesday, as they mounted rescue efforts for those stranded.

Rescuers worked through the night to retrieve bodies stuck in debris and to evacuate those in vulnerable areas, said S A Murugeshan, secretary of the state’s disaster management. On Tuesday, officials said 22 people were killed by the rains.

The mountainou­s state has seen incessant rains for the past three days, flooding roads, destroying bridges and causing landslides in which several homes were washed away. The situation has prompted help from more than 2,000 members of the paramilita­ry and civil police.

“There is huge loss due to the floods ... the crops have been destroyed,” Chief Minister Pushkar Singh Dhami told Reuters partner ANI after surveying the damage late on Tuesday.

“The locals are facing a lot of problems, the roads are waterlogge­d, bridges have been washed away.”

The Indian Meteorolog­ical Department said the rains were likely to recede in Uttarakhan­d on Wednesday, but warned of more heavy downpours in the country’s northeaste­rn and southern regions. The majority of the deaths in Uttarakhan­d were reported in the picturesqu­e town of Nainital, where 28 people were killed on Tuesday, said Murugeshan. Most of the deaths were caused by homes and buildings collapsing in the torrential rains, he added.

In Mukteshwar, a popular hill station in the state, five labourers died when a wall collapsed on their shanty. In another hilly town, Ramgarh, nine members of a family died as the rains washed away their home, the official said.

Videos shared on social media showed the Ganges River bursting its banks at Rishikesh, and the scenic Nainital Lake overflowin­g with floodwater­s.

Experts say the magnitude of the rains has been staggering. Uttarakhan­d saw 17.8 centimetre­s of rain in the first few weeks this month, but recorded nearly 58 centimetre­s within just 22 hours on Tuesday, said Bikram Singh, the director of the Meteorolog­ical Center in Dehradun, the state’s capital city.

He said climate change has not only increased the frequency of the rains, but also their intensity.

India has seen worrisome rains across several regions this week. Flooding and landslides caused by downpours over the week have killed at least 39 people in the southern Kerala state, which is on high alert for more rains in the coming days.

Landslides and floods are common in India’s Himalayan north. Scientists say they are becoming more frequent as global warming contribute­s to the melting of glaciers there.

In February, flash floods killed nearly 200 people and washed away houses in Uttarakhan­d. In 2013, thousands of people were killed in floods there. —

There is huge loss due to the floods ... the crops have been destroyed. The locals are facing a lot of problems, Pushkar Singh Dhami Uttarakhan­d CM

 ?? PTI ?? An army jawan rescues a child in flood-water in Tanakpur, Uttarakhan­d, on Wednesday. Several stranded people were rescued from the area. —
PTI An army jawan rescues a child in flood-water in Tanakpur, Uttarakhan­d, on Wednesday. Several stranded people were rescued from the area. —

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