Yahoo – AFP,
Prakash MATHEMA, August 14, 2017
![]() |
| Nepali residents look at the water in a flooded area in the Birgunj Parsa district, some 200km south of Kathmandu (AFP Photo/Manish Paudel) |
At least
175 people have died and thousands have fled their homes as monsoon floods
swept across Nepal, India and Bangladesh, officials said Monday, warning the
toll could rise as the extent of the damage becomes clear.
Three days
of relentless downpours sparked flash floods and landslides that have killed at
least 80 people in Nepal, 73 across northern and eastern India and 22 in
Bangladesh.
Around
200,000 people are living in emergency camps in Assam in northeast India, which
suffers frequent flooding during the annual monsoon rains.
Another
15,000 have had to leave their homes in the eastern state of Bihar, which
borders Nepal and where one official said seven rivers were at danger levels.
Large parts
of the state were submerged in 2008 when a river burst its banks across the
border in Nepal, with the two countries trading blame for the disaster.
All trains
to the northeast have been suspended until Wednesday, with sections of the
track completely submerged in water, Indian railway spokesman Anil Saxena told
AFP.
![]() |
Map of
Nepal and northern India, where monsoon floods and landslides have
killed at
least 94 people. (AFP Photo)
|
In Nepal,
ariel photos taken by an AFP photographer showed huge swathes of land in the
southeast still underwater Monday afternoon.
Police said
over 48,000 homes have been totally submerged by the floods across Nepal's
southern planes.
As
emergency workers struggled to reach far-flung areas, the country's home
ministry said another 36 people were missing, presumed dead, revising down an
earlier count after more bodies were found.
The Nepal
Red Cross warned that shortages of safe drinking water and food could create a
humanitarian crisis in the impoverished Himalayan country.
"In
many parts of the country there is a scarcity of safe drinking water creating a
high risk of health hazards," spokesman Dibya Raj Poudel told AFP.
"Several
villages and settlements are unreachable. Telecommunications, mobile phones are
still not working so it is difficult to give a full assessment."
A local
volunteer in Saptari district -- one of the worst affected areas -- said the
water level was receding but many people were still stranded on higher ground.
![]() |
Nearly 150
people have been killed in Nepal since the beginning of the rainy
season in
late June (AFP Photo)
|
"Water
level has decreased a little bit but families still cannot return home. They
are taking shelter in sheds. What people need now is clean drinking water and
food," volunteer Dipak Kumar Yadav told AFP.
On the
outskirts of Janakpur, in southeastern Nepal, local residents were sheltering
in a local temple after the flood waters had totally destroyed their basic mud
homes, though the water had mostly receded.
In India,
emergency workers were scouring the area hit by a massive landslide that swept
two passenger buses into a deep gorge on Sunday, killing at least 46 people in
the mountainous northern state of Himachal Pradesh.
In the
neighbouring state of Uttarakhand -- which also borders Nepal -- three people
were killed in a landslide late Sunday triggered by heavy rains, local police
official Ajay Joshi told AFP.
Bangladesh deploys troops
Bangladesh
deployed troops to shore up embankments in the north of the country, where
flooding has killed 22 people.
Local
government administrator Kazi Hasan Ahmed told AFP up to 700,000 people had been
marooned by flood waters after rivers burst their banks following days of heavy
rain.
"We've
not seen such severe floods in Dinajpur since 1988," he said, referring to
the worst-hit district.
![]() |
Three days
of relentless downpours sparked flash floods and landslides that
have killed 73
across northern and eastern India (AFP Photo/Arindam DEY)
|
"The
town protection embankment was washed away by flood water, submerging most of
the main town."
The
government's Flood Forecasting and Warning Centre warned that water levels in
some major rivers would continue to rise over the next 72 hours, raising fears
the flooding could spread.
In Nepal,
the worst of the flooding was in the southern lowlands known as the Terai, the
country's most fertile region and home to much of its agriculture.
"We
are getting reports that about 70 percent of agriculture area in the Tarai is
inundated," said Shankar Sapkota, senior agricultural economist with the
government.
"Paddy
fields, vegetable plantation and fish farms have been affected but right now we
cannot confirm the extent of damage."
Nearly 150
people have been killed in Nepal since the beginning of the rainy season in
late June.
The rains
are now expected to shift westwards and authorities in Nepal have begun
evacuating 74,000 people from a vulnerable western district.
Hundreds
have died in torrential rain, floods and landslides in neighbouring India
during the monsoon, which hits the country's southern tip in early June and
sweeps across the nation, lasting into September.




No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.