Floods kill 33 in India
Floods brought by heavy rains and overflowing rivers across large swathes of western and southern India have killed at least 33 people and forced the evacuation of 180,000 from their homes, officials said yesterday.
Seasonal monsoon rains from June to September cause deaths and mass displacement across South Asia every year, but they deliver more than 70 per cent of India's rainfall, crucial for farm output and economic growth.
The tally of dead in the floods was 25 in the western state of Maharashtra by yesterday, officials said, while government data in the neighbouring southern state of Karnataka showed eight dead.
Rivers burst their banks in some parts of Maharashtra after authorities released water from dams brimming with as much as 670mm of rain received in a week.
"If we get more rainfall, then we have no option but to release water in rivers," said administrative official Deepak Mhaisekar, adding that many reservoirs around the state's industrial city of Pune were full.
A boat full of villagers trying to escape the floods capsized yesterday, killing at least nine people, with rescuers searching for three or four still feared missing, he added.
Thousands of trucks were stuck on a national highway linking the financial capital of Mumbai with the southern technology hub of Bengaluru, as waters submerged the road in some places, Mhaisekar said.
In Karnataka, officials said some major reservoirs were nearly full, and warned that nearby villages could be hit by large discharges of water.
"We have sought help from the central government to rescue any people who may get stranded because of the floods," Chief Minister BS Yediyurappa told media.
Temples and electric poles were underwater as the floods flowed unabated, in video images posted by a journalist in a northern district of Karnataka.
Weather officials have forecast heavy rain in the region, including the nearby states of Kerala and Goa, over the next three to five days.
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