. Earth Science News .
India Monsoons Leave Hundreds Dead And Millions Stranded

AFP file image.
by Staff Writers
New Delhi (AFP) Jul 04, 2007
The death toll from this year's monsoon climbed to 474 on Wednesday as blinding rains lashed eastern India, according to officials and media reports. Two more deaths in the past 24 hours pushed the death toll to 13 in drenched West Bengal, officials said in state capital Kolkata where knee-deep flood waters invaded homes and offices. The city of 16 million people had received 300 millimetres (11.8 inches) of rainfall since Monday, the weather office said, and warned a depression brewing in the nearby Bay of Bengal was likely to soak the city on Thursday as well.

"Heavy to very heavy rainfall is expected in the next 24 hours," a weather department spokesman said as rowboats ferried food and drinking water to stranded residents across swathes of congested Kolkata.

But the western state of Maharashtra was worst-hit with the latest casualties put at 358, the Press Trust of India reported, quoting the area's relief minister Patangrao Kadam.

In adjoining Gujarat province 14 more deaths pushed up the local toll to 98.

Twenty-seven towns were were affected by the deluge which also disrupted life in state capital Mumbai, Kadam told reporters, although the situation now had improved.

Five rain deaths have been reported from central Madhya Pradesh, other officials said.

State authorities painted a grim picture in Gujarat where 165 people were marooned in worst-hit Patan district which had received 280 millimetres (11 inches) of non-stop rains since Tuesday, the Press Trust of India said.

Some 43,000 people have been evacuated from districts inundated by the rains which grew heavier in mid-June in Gujarat, said the Indian military, which was readying naval boats for large-scale rescue operations.

In Gujarat, the districts of Amreli, Bhavnagar and Jamnagar and Junagadh were among the worst hit, relief department officials said, and warned several reservoirs were brimming.

The monsoon rains, which sweep India from June to September, regularly disrupt life and often cause flooding and deaths in the densely populated country of a billion-plus people.

Nearly a million stranded in floods in eastern India
Kolkata, India (AFP) July 7 - Floods in eastern India have left nearly a million people stranded, authorities said Saturday, as the nationwide death toll from torrential monsoon rains hit 655. "All rivers are flowing above the danger level," said Mortaza Hossain, relief minister in West Bengal state, which has been hard hit by the rains. "Rescuers have evacuated some 6,500 people," he told AFP. The deluge has marooned almost a million people in 3,000 villages in coastal areas of the state, the minister said.

Five people have been washed away by flood waters, taking the toll in the past week in the state to 20 and nationwide to 655, according to officials and the Press Trust of India (PTI) agency.

In the western Indian state of Rajasthan, a dam, more than 100 years old, developed cracks after it filled up, district officials said.

"The crack happened Friday morning but by night water was coming out faster," said district official Kiran Soni Gupta, adding that the dam was filled to its capacity of 14,000 million cubic feet (420 million cubic metres).

Gupta said some 50 surrounding villages had been evacuated, with about 30,000 people moved to safer areas.

"Up until now we have taken water out but we are still worried it could collapse," she said.

Elsewhere in the state, 25 people were missing after a vehicle carrying 35 passengers fell into a swollen river, the PTI said.

The monsoon, which sweeps India from June to September, often causes flooding and deaths in the densely populated country of a billion-plus people.

Western Maharashtra state has recorded the most deaths, with 385, the PTI reported.

The deaths have been caused by building collapses, lightning strikes and drownings across India.

The army and air force were called to provide assistance in West Bengal, but bad weather has hampered relief efforts.

In the state capital Kolkata, more than 100 people have contracted infections due to the rains, officials said.

The deluge has also left a trail of death and destruction in Gujarat state in the country's west, and in the southern states of Karnataka, Kerala and Andhra Pradesh.

Source: Agence France-Presse

Community
Email This Article
Comment On This Article

Related Links
Bringing Order To A World Of Disasters
When the Earth Quakes
A world of storm and tempest



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Pakistan Aid Flights Start As Afghan Floods Kill 50
Quetta (AFP) Pakistan, June 28, 2007
Military helicopters led efforts to help 800,000 Pakistanis affected by a powerful cyclone Thursday as floods claimed 23 lives in the northeast and at least 50 in neighbouring Afghanistan. Nearly 450 people have now lost their lives in severe pre-monsoon weather which has swept across South Asia in the past week, which the United Nations said highlighted the need to prepare for the impact of global warming.







  • Impact Of Climate Change Equal To Nuclear War
  • Floods And Heatwaves Offer Warning Of Impact Of Climate Change
  • MIT Tool Determines Landslide Risk In Tropics
  • US Charitable Giving Sets New Record Topping Katrina Effort

  • The Challenge Of Desertification
  • Australian Drought Turns To Flood As California Dries Out
  • Norway Decries EU Protectionism On Carbon Dioxide Quotas
  • Swiss Climate Warms Twice As Fast As Northern Hemisphere

  • GOP House Science Committee To Evaluate NASA Earth Science Budget
  • Subcommittee Continues Look At Status of NASA Earth Science Programs
  • QuikSCAT Marks Eight Years On-Orbit Watching Planet Earth
  • Ukraine To Launch Earth Observation Satellite In 2008

  • Cities To Boom In Africa And Asia
  • Russia Pipeline No Threat To Europe Caspian Project Says Gazprom
  • India-Iran-Pakistan Talks On Gas Pipeline Still To Continue
  • Statoil And Shell Scrap Carbon Capture Plans To Pump More Oil

  • Another Potential Cure For HIV Discovered
  • Three Cases Of H5N1 Bird Flu Confirmed In Germany
  • Ancient Retrovirus Sheds Light On Modern Pandemic
  • Bird Flu Fears Reignited

  • Explorers To Use Robotic Vehicles To Hunt for Life And Vents On Arctic Seafloor
  • Ancient DNA Traces The Woolly Mammoth Disappearance
  • Book Makes Case For Using Evolution In Everyday Life
  • Study Shows Lizard Moms Dress Their Children For Success

  • Environmental Degradation A Growing Public Danger To People In China
  • Islands Off China Vanishing Under Weight Of Exploitation
  • Hong Kong Choked By Growing Pollution Problem
  • China To Force Polluters To Pay More

  • Urban Populations Booming
  • The Greening Of Alcatraz
  • AMA Cools Video Game Objections
  • Extra Police And Military For Australian Aboriginal Towns

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2007 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement