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   Rains wreak havoc in eastern India, army called out





June 18 (IANS) Millions of people across five Indian states were Wednesday
battling to cope with crippling floods that submerged their houses and
fields and threw road and rail services out of gear in some areas. The
picture everywhere was the same: people perched precariously on the rooftops
of their huts, vast open fields under a sheet of water, roads and
embankments being washed away by the swirling waters and trains stranded at
railway stations.



The authorities in the affected states were working round the clock to
rescue the marooned and provide relief to those rendered homeless - with the
Indian Army being called out in West Bengal to assist in the effort and
asked to remain on the standby in other states.



Some 1.6 million people have been affected in West Bengal, with five people
having died. Train services have been paralysed due to the ravaging waters.



In Orissa, flash floods triggered by heavy rains in the past four days have
hit about half a million people in four northern districts, submerged
thousands of acres of land, snapped electricity supply and disrupted road
and train services.



In Jharkhand, torrential rain for the last three days has badly affected
life in many parts of the state. Two people have died in house collapses and
the state government Wednesday asked the army to remain on alert.



In Assam, thousands of people were still in relief camps even though the
floodwaters were receding. The authorities also sounded a health alert to
prevent outbreak of any waterborne diseases.



In Uttar Pradesh, a flood alert was sounded Wednesday in over 30 districts
of including Lakhimpur Kheri, Faizabad, Gonda and Bahraich, following
incessant rains.



"About 1.6 million people have been affected due to the floods," West Bengal
Finance Minister Asim Dasgupta told newspersons in Kolkata after a
high-level meeting chaired by Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee.



He said 350 tonnes of rice and 25,000 tarpaulin sheets have been sent to the
affected areas, while Rs.2.5 billion were sanctioned for emergency relief.



A defence spokesman said one team each from 3 Madras Regiment and 6
Engineers Regiment were being sent to assist the district administration in
relief and rescue operations in the severely affected Sabong, Narayangarh
and Pingla areas of West Midnapore district.



Indian Air Force speedboats have been deployed to rescue marooned people in
Belda, the spokesman said.



Train services on the South Eastern Railway's Howrah-Kharagpur section were
badly hit due to heavy rainfall in Kharagpur in West Midnapore district and
Contai in East Midnapore district.



Eighteen long-distance trains were cancelled, while several trains have been
stranded at various stations due to water logging of the tracks.



The situation is likely to worsen in Orissa with rains continuing in the
region and in the upper catchments areas, an official said.



"The total number of people affected would be about half a million," B.
Baral, Orissa's additional commissioner (relief), told IANS.



All rivers in the Balasore, Mayurbhanj, Keonjhar and Bhadrak districts are
in spate due to heavy rains caused by a depression in the Bay of Bengal and
many of them are flowing above the danger level, said Durgesh Nandini Sahu,
officer on special duty at the revenue control room.



Road and railway services were disrupted in many of the flood hit areas,
with most of the trains running through the region being terminated due to
water logging on the tracks.



Jharkhand Chief Minister Madhu Koda told reporters in the capital Ranchi:
"We have asked the army to be on alert so that they can help whenever
required."



Many parts of Ranchi and Jamshedpur have been flooded. House collapses
caused by torrential rain have claimed two lives, one in Ranchi Tuesday and
the other in Jamshedpur Wednesday.



According to the Met office, Jharkhand has received over 300 mm of rain in
the past three days.



An alert has been sounded in the steel city of Jamshedpur following the
flooding of many localities and a threat posed by overflowing dams. The
Suvarnarekha river is overflowing. Over 700 people have been shifted to
safer places in the city.



The water from the overflowing Khakhai river has entered over 300 houses in
Jugsalai, Bagbera, Shastrinagar, Azadnagar and Daiguttu areas of Jamshedpur
district.



The incessant rains have affected air and railway services and the national
highway has been damaged at many places.



In Guwahati, Assam Revenue, Relief And Rehabilitation Minister Bhumidhar
Barman said: "The flood situation has improved considerably with no
overnight rains.



"People are heading back to their homes, but thousands of them are still in
makeshift shelters as their homes are filled with mud and slush," Barman
told IANS.



A Central Water Commission bulletin Wednesday said the main Brahmaputra
river and its tributaries were still above the danger mark in some places
although the trend was receding.



The floods that began over the weekend left eight dead and displaced more
than 400,000 people in about 350 villages in the two districts of Lakhimpur
and Sonitpur.



"Teams of doctors and paramedics are on full alert and visiting flood-hit
areas, although there are no reports of any outbreak of waterborne
diseases," Assam Health Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma said.



Road communications between Lakhimpur and rest of Assam continued to be
snapped with floodwaters overtopping highways and breaching culverts.



"We have set up more than 100 camps and providing relief materials and
medicines to the people," Barman said.



The water level in various rivers in Uttar Pradesh, including the Ghagra,
the Sharda, the Saryu and the Gomti, has risen following weeklong rains, an
official said.



Pinky Jowel, district magistrate Lakhimpur Kheri, told IANS: "Although at
present the Sharda river is flowing below the danger mark, there is a
possibility the water level in the river may rise and cause floods."



thaindian.com/newsportal/uncategorized/millions-across-india-battle-crippling-floods-roundup_10061675.html



















Rains wreak havoc in eastern India, army called out



Kolkata-Bhubaneswar (PTI): Rains wreaked havoc in most parts of eastern
India as army troops were on wednesday rushed to two flood-hit districts in
West Bengal while Orissa alerted the Air Force and Jharkhand sought army
help to tackle the situation that has affected nearly 25 lakh people.



Five persons died in West Bengal and four in Orissa due to the torrential
rains, officials said. Three army columns were rushed to West Bengal's West
and East Midnapore districts as an IAF helicopter made an aerial survey of
the affected areas, state Finance Minister Ashim Dasgupta said.



If necessary, food would be airdropped from tomorrow in the two districts
that have registered a record 700 mm rainfall in the past three days, he
said, adding the situation has been compounded by 3.50 lakh cusecs discharge
from the Chandil-Galudi reservoir in adjoining Jharkhand.



In Orissa, the state government alerted the Air Force for relief and rescue
operations. Describing the situation in four districts, particularly in
Balasore as "grim", Revenue and Disaster Management Minister Manmohan Samal
said nearly 1.5 lakh people have been affected due to the flash floods
caused by torrential rains.



The steel city of Jamshedpur recorded 338.1 mm of rainfall -- the heaviest
in the past six decades -- since on Tuesday.



In the northeastern state of Assam, the situation showed some signs of
improvement with cessation of rain even as the worst hit Lakhimpur, where 22
people have perished, and Dhemaji districts remained cut off following the
breach of National Highway 52.



hindu.com/thehindu/holnus/000200806181964.htm















Rains disrupt life in Jamshedpur



Jamshedpur (PTI): Torrential rains, the highest in a decade, lashing the
Steel City and its surrounding areas in Jharkhand, disrupted life for the
third day on Wednesday.



Met office sources said a record 338.1 mm rainfall was recorded here since
Tuesday morning.



Railway services came to a grinding halt due to the rains, Railway sources
said. Most of the trains passing through Tatanagar were either cancelled or
diverted.



The police and fire-brigade personnel were kept on high alert and executive
magistrates asked to watch the situation which might worsen if the rains
continued, East Singhbhum deputy commissioner Ravindra Agarwal told PTI.



Waterlogging was reported from low lying areas and boats were used to
evacuate people, he said.



"We have shifted about 400 people to safer places but some people in Kadma
and Mango are still stranded on roof-tops," Agarwal said.



There was, however, no report of any casualty, he said.



Over 100 families in Jugsalai, Bagbera, Shastrinagar, Azadnagar, Daiguttu
were affected as water gushed into the areas from Kharkhai river.



Road traffic in several areas, including Bistupur, Jugsalai were disrupted
due to water-logging.



The boundary wall of an automobile factory at Adityapur industrial area
collapsed last night washing away several semi-finished equipment, including
gas cylinders and huge quantity of hydraulic oil.



While some schools in the steel city were closed due to waterlogging,
attendance in offices was thin.



hindu.com/thehindu/holnus/004200806181521.htm
















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