Bangkok Post

South Asia floods affect over 16m people

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>> KATHMANDU: More than 16 million people have been affected by floods in South Asia, aid workers and officials said, with heavy rains and damaged roads hampering relief efforts amid severe food shortages and a growing risk of waterborne diseases.

Heavy monsoon rains in Nepal, Bangladesh and India have killed more than 343 people, officials and aid workers said.

“This is fast becoming one of the most serious humanitari­an crises this region has seen in many years,” said Martin Faller, deputy regional director for Asia Pacific at the Internatio­nal Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies.

“Millions of people face severe food shortages and disease. We fear [it] will get worse in the days and weeks ahead.”

More than a third of Bangladesh and Nepal have been flooded, Mr Faller said.

In Nepal, 27 of 75 districts were either submerged or hit by landslides, leaving villages and communitie­s stranded without food, water and electricit­y.

Home Ministry official Shankar Acharya said 131 people had been killed and 30 were missing.

“We need donors’ assistance and support from social organisati­ons,” an official statement said.

Aid workers are rushing to deliver tarpaulins for temporary shelter, food and water, said Dev Ratna Dhakhwa, secretary-general of the Nepal Red Cross Society.

Residents face “severe food shortages” as food crops have been wiped out in the worst floods in 15 years, he said.

The risk of a “significan­t public health crisis” from waterborne diseases such as cholera is also high, charity WaterAid said.

In Bangladesh, flood levels have reached record highs. At least 56 people have been killed and about 4 million are affected, the Red Crescent said on Thursday.

The situation could get worse as swollen rivers carry rainwater from neighbouri­ng India downstream into the low-lying and densely populated country.

“The immediate situation is extremely desperate,” Save the Children Director Mark Pierce said in a statement.

“The sheer volume of water is also making it really difficult to access some of the communitie­s most in need.”

In India, more than 11 million people have been affected in four states across the north and east, with at least 156 killed.

“These are the worst floods in Assam in a decade,” Keshab Mahanta, relief and rehabilita­tion minister, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Relief operations have been hampered, even as food packets are being dropped from helicopter­s in the worst affected areas.

In a makeshift relief camp in Kaliabor, 160km east of Guwahati city, families said they had not received any aid.

“We are practicall­y starving, with no government supplies reaching us,” said Arunima Dutta, mother of three, who is sheltering from the disaster with hundreds of others.

“Though we come to expect these rains every year, this year is particular­ly severe,” Save the Children India manager Murali Kunduru said.

 ??  ?? WRATH OF RAINS: The carcass of a tiger lies in floodwater­s at the Bagori range inside Kaziranga National Park in the northeaste­rn Indian state of Assam.
WRATH OF RAINS: The carcass of a tiger lies in floodwater­s at the Bagori range inside Kaziranga National Park in the northeaste­rn Indian state of Assam.

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