San Francisco Chronicle

Continued floods bring death, havoc

- By Wasbir Hussain Wasbir Hussain is an Associated Press writer.

GAUHATI, India — Monsoon flooding and landslides continued to cause havoc in South Asia on Tuesday, with the death toll rising to 78 in Nepal and authoritie­s in neighborin­g northeaste­rn India battling to provide relief to more than 4 million people in Assam state, officials said.

Nepal’s National Emergency Operation Center said more than 40,000 soldiers and police were using helicopter­s and roads to rush food, tents and medicine to thousands of people hit by the annual flooding. Rescuers also were searching for 32 missing people.

In Bangladesh, more than 100,000 people were affected by flooding in the north and forecaster­s warned that major rivers continued to swell across the country.

Rivers burst their banks in the northern district of Lalmonirha­t, marooning villages, news reports said, quoting local water board officials.

In the Indian state of Assam, officials said floodwater­s have killed at least 19 people and brought misery to some 4.5 million.

More than 85,000 people have taken shelter in 187 state government­run camps in 30 of the state’s 33 districts, the state disaster management authority said in a statement.

Atiqua Sultana, a district magistrate, said a flooded river washed away a 490foot stretch of Assam’s border road with Bangladesh, flooding 70 villages on the Indian side.

Around 80% of Assam’s Kaziranga National Park, home to the endangered onehorn rhinoceros, has been flooded by the Brahmaputr­a river, which flows along the sanctuary, forest officer Jutika Borah said.

After causing flooding and landslides in Nepal, three rivers have been overflowin­g in India and submerging parts of eastern Bihar state, killing at least 24 people, said Pratata Amrit, a state government official.

More than 2.5 million people have been hit by the flooding in 12 of 38 districts of Bihar state, Amrit said.

In Bangladesh, at least a dozen people, mostly farmers, have been killed by lightning since Saturday as monsoon rains battered parts of the lowlying country.

Bangladesh, with 160 million people and more than 130 rivers, is prone to monsoon floods because of overflowin­g rivers and the heavy onrush of water from upstream India.

Monsoon rains hit the region in JuneSeptem­ber. The rains are crucial for rainfed crops planted during the season.

 ?? Anupam Nath / Associated Press ?? Residents need boats to travel near a submerged house in Burha Burhi village east of Gauhati city, India.
Anupam Nath / Associated Press Residents need boats to travel near a submerged house in Burha Burhi village east of Gauhati city, India.

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