NEW DELHI, June 17: Heavy rains pounded parts of north India on Monday, resulting in the deaths of at least 26 people, as the annual monsoon covered the country nearly two weeks ahead of schedule, officials said.
The Press Trust of India put the death toll at 30 and a government minister in the rain-ravaged state of Uttarakhand said the number of people killed in the region was likely to be higher.
Surprise showers struck the capital New Delhi over the weekend, flooding the arrival halls in the international and domestic airports and leading to traffic snarls in parts of the city.
“Twenty-six people have died and more than 50 persons are missing, due to flooding, landslides and building collapses caused by heavy rain,” Piyush Rautela, director of Uttarakhand's disaster management centre, said.
State Disaster Management and Rehabilatation Yashpal Arya painted a grim picture of devastation in the hilly state.
“The toll could be much higher but we do not have authentic data as communications networks are down and people are trying to save their own lives,” Arya said in local capital Dehradun.
Television stations broadcast footages of multi-storied buildings crashing and then being washed away in the swirling waters of Mandakini river.
Dehradun received a record 220 millimetres of rain in a 24-hour-period on Sunday.
River water levels are continuing to rise across the state, clogging roads and leaving hundreds of pilgrims stranded on their way to visit Hindu shrines, officials said.
Four people died and five others are feared dead due to landslides in the neighbouring state of Himachal Pradesh, a local police official told AFP by telephone.
“A family of five, including three children were buried alive when boulders fell on their house in Chagaon village of Kinnaur,” G.Shiva, police chief of Kinnaur district, said.
A few villages close to the China border have also seen unseasonal snowfall, leaving dozens of shepherds and thousands of sheep stranded, a village headman said.
The rains also caused traffic snarls and delays in train services in India's financial capital Mumbai.
“This is the first time that the rains have covered the country so early.
Before this, the earliest was on June 21, 1960,” B.P. Yadav, director of the India Meteorological Department.
The early onset of the annual monsoon has boosted hopes for the country's farming sector and its slowing economy.—AFP
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