San Francisco Chronicle

Hundreds killed as flooding from monsoons soaks region

-

GUAHATI, India — Across northern India and neighborin­g Nepal and Bangladesh, the death toll from drownings, collapsed houses and landslides triggered by annual monsoon rains climbed to at least 578 on Saturday.

Army soldiers and disaster management workers in the three countries have launched mammoth rescue efforts to evacuate and provide food and shelter to the nearly 16 million people affected by the floods in South Asia.

In the northern Indian state of Bihar, at least 153 people died as swirling floodwater­s submerged hundreds of villages and swept away homes made of mud and straw.

Eleven million people have been affected by the floods in 17 districts of the state, said Pratay Amrit, an official in Bihar’s disaster management department. Nearly half a million people were in more than 1,300 state-run relief camps, where they were being provided food and medical care, he said.

In neighborin­g Uttar Pradesh state, the death toll rose to 40 as floodwater­s submerged entire villages after 13 small dams were washed away, state officials said.

Meanwhile, the rising floodwater­s have inundated large parts of a famous wildlife reserve park in northeaste­rn India, killing more than 225 animals and forcing hundreds of other animals to flee, the park director said Saturday.

Around 15 rhinos, 185 deer and at least one Royal Bengal tiger have died in the floods that have submerged almost the entire Kaziranga National Park in Assam state, Satyendra Singh said.

“Carcasses of animals were seen floating in the floodwater­s. It’s a heartbreak­ing scene,” Singh said.

The Rohini, Gandak and Rapti rivers were flowing above the danger mark and could breach their banks, adding to the sense of urgency in evacuating people from low-lying villages, said Avnish Awasthi, a government spokesman.

The flood situation worsened after water was released from swollen rivers in Nepal that threatened to overflow, Awasthi said.

Soldiers used motorboats to rescue people marooned on rooftops while air force helicopter­s dropped packets of food and drinking water to those trapped in their homes.

In Nepal, floods have killed around 110 people since the monsoon rains began in June. However, the floodwater­s were receding and no new casualties have been recorded, officials said. In Bangladesh, more than 70 people have died over the past week due to drowning or snake bites this monsoon season.

 ?? Aftab Alam Siddiqui / Associated Press ?? Evacuees from flooding sleep near a highway toll plaza in the Araria district in the eastern Indian state of Bihar.
Aftab Alam Siddiqui / Associated Press Evacuees from flooding sleep near a highway toll plaza in the Araria district in the eastern Indian state of Bihar.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States