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More flood misery, deaths for monsoon-hit S.Asia
30 Jul 2007 12:37:00 GMT
Source: Reuters
By Biswajyoti Das

GUWAHATI, India, July 30 (Reuters) - Monsoon flooding killed at least 29 people in eastern India and Bangladesh, officials said on Monday, as hundreds of thousands remained displaced from their homes or cut off in their villages.

In the Indian states of Assam and Bihar, at least 24 people, including three children, were killed in weather-related incidents since Sunday morning, bringing the death toll to 75 in a week.

Around 4 million people have been affected, with many seeking shelter on bridges, rooftops and high ground.

"The floods situation has turned worse overnight," Bhumidhar Burman, a minister in Assam in India's northeast, said. "We have stepped up our relief measures on a war footing."

Officials in neighbouring Bangladesh said half a million people were stranded in their homes while tens of thousands had found shelter in close to 100 relief camps.

The floods in the low-lying nation now cover half its area, with troops in boats providing medicines and food to some marooned residents and evacuating others.

The country's summer flood death toll crossed 160, with five more flood-related deaths reported, including three children.

GRAVEYARDS UNDER WATER

The deaths were the latest fatalities from storms, landslides and monsoon flooding in South Asia this month that has killed hundreds in India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Afghanistan and Nepal.

Further east in Asia, deaths from floods, lightning and landslides across China this summer reached nearly 700, with 17 people killed in fierce storms and hail over the weekend.

Across eastern India, government buildings, small airports, military bases, hospitals and railway stations have been flooded, while the meteorological office warned of more rain.

Bihar's residents fear an epidemic as bodies cannot be buried or cremated with graveyards and cremation grounds under water.

Many highways were submerged, disrupting the movement of food and medicine. Air force helicopters were dropping food to marooned people, while schools were closed in many areas.

The situation was similar in Assam, in northeastern India.

The Kaziranga National Park -- famous for its one-horn rhinoceros -- was waterlogged, with floods forcing animals to move to the highway passing through the sanctuary.

Assam police launched a crackdown on traders selling food at inflated prices.

"Four traders have been arrested and warnings have been issued to others," a police spokesman said.

In the mountainous states of Arunachal Pradesh and Meghalaya, part of India's remote northeast, roads have been blocked by landslides, which has caused food scarcity in tribal areas. (Additional reporting by a Reuters reporter in Patna and by Serajul Islam Quadir in Dhaka)


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Last updated:Mon Jul 30 12:37:07 2007