The National - News

No electricit­y, no food or clothes: resident tells of family’s suffering as floods kill 39 people in India

- TANIYA DUTTA New DelhI

Srinivaslu Konda and his extended family of 40 spent more than two days trapped in their home by the flash flooding that hit India’s southern coastal regions on Friday.

Extreme weather killed at least 39 people and more than 20 are missing.

“I have never seen such a calamity in my life. I am shaken. I have few words to express what I have been through,” said Mr Konda, 48, a resident of Mandapally village in the Kadapa district of Andhra Pradesh state.

He said his family was surviving on food distribute­d by volunteers.

“There is no electricit­y, no food or clothes … everything is gone, we have nothing left,” he told The National.

Kadapa was the worst-affected district when rains caused by a deep depression in the Bay of Bengal moved inland on Friday, causing the worst floods in the region in about 30 years.

Mr Konda said he was not prepared for the ferocity of the flooding, which deluged his home in two metres of water.

“We live in a joint family. There were 40 to 50 people at the time. We all rushed to the third floor of the house to save our lives. The ground floor was completely flooded,” he said.

He described scenes of collapsed houses, uprooted trees, broken roads and streets littered with livestock carcasses after the rain eased on Saturday.

About 250 houses in Mandapally and neighbouri­ng villages in Kadapa were damaged or destroyed.

“My house is partially gone. One side of the compound wall is broken. There is sludge everywhere. It is a harrowing sight,” Mr Konda said.

Andhra Pradesh authoritie­s said at least 15 people died in Kadapa and eight in Chittoor district. Another six were killed after their house in Ananthapur collapsed yesterday.

One police officer died during a rescue operation, the state government’s spokesman said.

The situation in Rayalaseem­a region, where as much as 24 centimetre­s of rainfall was recorded on Friday, remained grim, with nearly 31,000 people staying in government-run camps.

At least nine people were killed in neighbouri­ng Tamil Nadu state, when their house in Vellore district collapsed after heavy rains on Friday.

Fourteen people had already died in heavy rains there that have battered the state since early this month.

The north-east monsoon, which brings rain to India’s southern states between October and December, has been heavier than usual this year.

Tamil Nadu has reported a rainfall excess of more than 65 per cent for November.

 ?? Srinivaslu Konda ?? A villager in Mandapally, Andhra Pradesh state, views the aftermath of flooding that has affected southern India
Srinivaslu Konda A villager in Mandapally, Andhra Pradesh state, views the aftermath of flooding that has affected southern India

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