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Deadly floods hit Indian Kashmir's Srinagar
by Staff Writers
Srinagar, India (AFP) Sept 07, 2014


Kashmiri residents walk along an embankment on the side of a bridge as they head for a higher ground during flooding on the outskirts of Srinagar on September 6, 2014. More than 200 people in Pakistan and northern India have been killed in torrential monsoon rains which triggered flooding, landslides and house collapses, officials in the two countries said September 6. Troops and other emergency personnel were deployed in both countries to help with relief operations, with boats and helicopters being used to reach stranded people. Image courtesy AFP.

Italy's Gargano hit by deadly floods
Rome (AFP) Sept 06, 2014 - One person died and another was missing following devastating floods in the Gargano peninsula in south-eastern Italy, local authorities said Saturday.

Parts of the mountainous area, which is located east of the city of Foggia and forms the 'spur' of the Italian boot, have suffered the heaviest rainfall registered in 80 years with more than 60cm (two feet) falling over the course of recent days, the equivalent of three quarters of the usual annual rainfall.

More than a 1,000 people had to be evacuated from campsites. At least 11 regional roads were unpassable because of the water level and there were severe delays on local train services.

The dead man was named as Antonio Facenna, 24, a farmer who had disappeared on Wednesday evening after going out in heavy rain to check on his animals. His corpse was recovered on Saturday by rescue workers.

Another man, Vincenzo Blenxs, 70, was still unaccounted for on Saturday evening.

Soldiers were battling Sunday to rescue thousands of people trapped in Indian Kashmir's worst flooding for half a century which has left more than 100 people dead and the main city of Srinagar under water.

Some 350 villages have also been submerged since torrential monsoon rains triggered flooding across the picturesque Himalayan region of Jammu and Kashmir.

Across the border in Pakistan, landslides, flash flooding and house collapses also from days of heavy rain have left another 128 people dead, officials there said.

The Jhelum river, swollen by heavy rain, flooded large parts of Srinagar on Sunday and forced frantic residents onto rooftops, with reports the first floors of a children's hospital and of another hospital were underwater.

"I want to appeal to people not to panic," Jammu and Kashmir state chief minister Omar Abdullah told reporters.

"I know the situation is bad but they should stay above the water level... it may take up to an hour but we will reach them and take them out," he said.

"We are taking all the measures to ensure that we can reach the maximum number of people," he said, adding that 110 people have died in the state so far.

Hundreds of troops, police and other emergency personnel, backed by helicopters and boats, have been deployed across the state to reach those stranded, with 11,000 people rescued so far, officials said.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi flew to the normally picturesque, remote region to meet Abdullah and emergency response officials amid concerns the death toll could jump.

A police official in Srinagar, a city of 900,000, said he feared the true extent of the devastation was not yet known because phone networks were down and areas cut off.

"We are in a catastrophic situation," he told AFP on condition of anonymity, adding that Srinagar's police headquarters was under water.

"Many people may have died and houses collapsed but we are not getting to know much (information)," he said.

- Trapped in homes -

An AFP reporter in Srinagar was forced to the third floor of his house after water flooded the second, with no sign of emergency officials to evacuate him.

"We will have to move to the roof but we are also worried about the building collapsing," he said adding that water has risen about 12 feet (3.6 metres).

From his window in the centre of the Muslim-majority's city, he said he could see other residents on their roofs and top storeys of their homes, their arms in the air praying.

Another resident, Aakifa Javaid, said her local mosque announced on loudspeakers that "it would be a difficult night, no one should sleep" as the river overflowed its banks.

Like hundreds of others in her neighbourhood in the city's north, she fled in the middle of the night when the water reached her home.

An army headquarters was also under water along with some government buildings, while roads and bridges throughout the region have been cut or washed away.

Hundreds of soldiers, backed by 22 helicopters and four aircraft, have fanned out across the Kashmir Valley and the rest of the state to rescue those stranded, deliver aid and restore phone lines, said national cabinet secretary Ajit Seth.

"About 70 boats have (also) been airlifted, 20 have already left from Palam (in Delhi) a short while ago," he told the NDTV network.

Several thousand villages across the region, which has long been in the grip of a deadly separatist insurgency, have been hit and 350 of them are submerged, the home ministry said late Saturday.

The ministry put the death toll at 116 across the state, although the chief minister said the figure was 110, with another 128 across the border in Pakistan which has also been hit hard by the floods.

Heavy rains were, however, easing and have stopped altogether in parts of Pakistan following the floods that have damaged 108 villages as well as farmland in that country, the National Disaster Management Authority spokesman said.

burs-tha/sm

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SHAKE AND BLOW
Eleven dead, 27 missing in China rainstorms
Beijing (AFP) Sept 02, 2014
Eleven people died and 27 others are missing after torrential rains battered southwest China's Chongqing municipality, causing thousands of houses to collapse, state media said late Tuesday. Nearly 40,000 people have been evacuated from their homes, the official Xinhua news agency quoted the local government as saying. In Fengjie County, on the vast Yangtze river, landslides have formed ... read more


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