KOLKATA, June 20: The death toll from monsoon flooding in eastern India climbed to 26 on Friday, with hundreds of villages cut off and an estimated four million people displaced, officials said.

Bridges were washed away and roads and railway tracks submerged by the swirling waters in West and East Midnapore districts, said West Bengal state’s finance minister Asim Dasgupta.

“Telephone lines were snapped and electric poles uprooted. Nearly 2.5 million people were forced from their homes by flood in over 300 villages during the past four days,” Dasgupta said.

“The death toll has risen to 26 as 15 people drowned during the past 24 hours,” he said.

Helicopters were airdropping food and essentials as army personnel and aid workers struggled to reach the growing number of people marooned, he said, adding there also appeared to be no let-up in the heavy rains.

Defence spokesman R K Das said thousands of people were taking shelter on rooftops and elevated areas but were running short of food and drinking water.

In neighbouring Orissa, nearly a million people were cut off in the neighbouring eastern coastal state of Orissa, disaster management minister Manmohan Samal said earlier this week.

Further to the northeast, in Assam state, more than 350,000 people had taken shelter in government camps to escape from rising waters, the government said earlier this week, before flood waters started receding on Wednesday.

Every year the monsoon causes the Brahmaputra river to flood, submerging paddy fields, washing away villages, drowning livestock and killing people in Assam.

Although the army has been called out to provide aid, people in many villages were angry at delays.

“We have not got any relief so far, we are homeless and starving for the past three days,” said Usharani Manna, a flood victim in West Midnapore district.

Prices of essential commodities have shot up across the region as flooding blocked many highways and trucks carrying food and medicine were stranded.—Agencies

Opinion

Editorial

Online oppression
Updated 04 Dec, 2024

Online oppression

Plan to bring changes to Peca is simply another attempt to suffocate dissent. It shows how the state continues to prioritise control over real cybersecurity concerns.
The right call
04 Dec, 2024

The right call

AMIDST the ongoing tussle between the federal government and the main opposition party, several critical issues...
Acting cautiously
04 Dec, 2024

Acting cautiously

IT appears too big a temptation to ignore. The wider expectations for a steeper reduction in the borrowing costs...
Competing narratives
03 Dec, 2024

Competing narratives

Rather than hunting keyboard warriors, it would be better to support a transparent probe into reported deaths during PTI protest.
Early retirement
03 Dec, 2024

Early retirement

THE government is reportedly considering a proposal to reduce the average age of superannuation by five years to 55...
Being differently abled
03 Dec, 2024

Being differently abled

A SOCIETY comes of age when it does not normalise ‘othering’. As we observe the International Day of Persons ...