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India flood crisis 'deteriorates'



The flood situation in India's eastern states of Orissa, West Bengal and
Jharkhand continues to deteriorate, officials say.



But they say that there has been some improvement in the worst affected
state of Assam in the country's north-east.



More than eight million people have been affected by severe floods and
thousands have been displaced.



In Orissa officials say they are battling to get food to marooned people in
the north of the state.



Many states in the north-east and east of India have been hit hard by
flooding.



The army has been deployed in the state of Jharkhand - where nearly two and
half million people have been affected by torrential rain - the heaviest for
six decades, according to officials.



Five people have died in the wet weather in West Bengal and four in Orissa,
officials said.



"We have not been able to reach thousands of people encircled by flood
waters on all sides as road links have been badly damaged and the swirling
water of the rivers is making the movement of boats difficult," a senior
official engaged in the Orissa relief operation told the BBC.





The district of Lakhimpur in Assam is one of the worst hit



Nearly 40,000 people in the state's low lying areas have been evacuated to
safer places.



The Orissa government started air-dropping food to inaccessible areas on
Thursday morning.



Officials said nearly a million people in four Orissa districts -
Mayurbhanj, Balasore, Bhadrak and Jajpur - have been affected by the floods.




More than half a million people have been affected in Balasore alone,
officials said, and a total of 850 villages have been cut off.



Consolation



Meanwhile three army columns were rushed to West Bengal's West and East
Midnapore districts after more than 700mm rainfall lashed the two districts
over the past three days.



A total of two million people have been affected by the floods in these two
districts as the Subarnarekha River continued to rise, leaving nearly
300,000 people marooned.



The BBC's north-east India correspondent, Subir Bhaumik, says that there was
some consolation for the authorities in Assam, where there are signs that
heavy rainfall is abating.



But our correspondent says that the worst affected districts of Lakhimpur
and Dhemaji districts remain cut off from the rest of the state following a
huge breach of national highway number 52.



Officials say that two and half million people have been affected by the
floods in Assam and 12 have died.



news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/7464375.stm















Villages turn islands, lakhs homeless





Floods continued to wreak havoc in three eastern states and Assam on
Thursday.



In Orissa, an estimated 10 lakh people have so far been affected by floods
while in West Bengal lakhs of villagers have been stranded and about 55,000
rescued and placed in 150 relief camps. In Jharkhand, about 3,000 people
have been affected by nature's fury.



In Assam 22 people were killed in two districts bordering Arunachal Pradesh
due to excessive release of water from a hydro electric project in
Arunachal.



The flood situation in north Orissa remained grave on Thursday with the
Subernarekha, Budhabalanga, Baitarani and Jalaka rivers inundating large
areas in the districts of Balasore, Bhadrak, Mayurbhanj and Jajpur. A
portion of National Highway 60 near Rupsa in Balasore district has been
swept away, cutting off the road  to Bhubaneswar and Kolkata. The death toll
however remained at four.



In Narayangar in Bengal's Midnapore West district, 85-year-old Kulebala
Maity took shelter on a tree-top till she was rescued by armymen on Thursday
afternoon.



78-year-old Jarnali Bera was trapped in roof top when flood water washed
away their house in Amedein village in Midnapore West.



Though Maity and Bera were rescued on Thursday morning, there are lakhs of
other villagers who are still stranded in flood waters in Midnapore East and
West districts.



In Jharkhand's East Singhbhum and Seraikela-Kharsawan districts, more than
3,000 families have been rendered homeless in flash floods following a
record 363.07 mm rainfall on Wednesday. Two persons died while over a dozen
others survived from drowning in the flood waters. In Jamshedpur, two more
gharials escaped from their enclosure in the Tata Zoo. One had reportedly
been swept away by the floods into the swelling Subernarekha river on
Wednesday.



hindustantimes.com/storypage/storypage.aspx?id=20ae94e2-c40e-40c5-856c-b2cbdb06b1b6&&Headline=Villages+turn+islands%2c+lakhs+homeless

















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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