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Published 29 Aug, 2008 12:00am

Thousands of flood victims evacuated in India

SAHARSA/PATNA, Aug 28: Indian army troops helped evacuate more than 120,000 people from floods in eastern India, but more bad weather raised fears that rivers would to continue to overflow, officials said on Thursday.

The flooding, which officials say are the worst in 50 years, was caused after the Kosi river broke a dam in Nepal where it originates, unleashing huge waves of water that smashed mud embankments downstream in Bihar state.

Many villagers offered prayers and slaughtered goats to appease the Kosi, known as Bihar’s “River of Sorrow” for its regular floods and ability to change course.

“We are praying to the river goddess and offering her blood since only she can help us,” a village woman in the worst affected Supaul district told a local newspaper.

At least two million people have been forced from their homes and a quarter of a million houses destroyed. So far 55 deaths have been officially reported in Bihar, but activists and local media put the toll many times higher.

Stranded villagers complained of an unbearable stench from rotting carcasses and the United Nations warned of the spread of water-borne disease.

TV stations showed swirling flood waters pouring into homes through windows, submerging hundreds of villages and roads and railway tracks. Telephone and power lines snapped.

Torrential rains have killed more than 1,000 people in South Asia since the monsoon began in June, mainly in India’s northern state of Uttar Pradesh, where 725 people have lost their lives. Other deaths were reported from Nepal and Bangladesh.

Some experts blame the floods on heavier monsoon rains caused by global warming, while others say authorities have failed to take preventive measures and improve infrastructure.

“The administration is misleading people about the casualty, I have myself seen some 40 dead bodies at a village in Araria district alone,” flood expert Dinesh Kumar Mishra told The Times of India newspaper.

The newspaper quoted a villager from a badly affected district as saying he had seen at least 250 bodies at one place.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Sonia Gandhi, head of the ruling Congress party, flew over devastated areas by helicopter on Thursday.

State officials said that more than 120,000 had been evacuated and kept in more than 100 temporary camps, but bad weather was hampering rescue and relief operations.

“We have the army, disaster management teams, police and other groups of rescuers making every effort to save the population,” said R.K. Singh, a top disaster management official.

Officials said floods had destroyed more than 227,000 homes and damaged about 100,000 hectares of vegetables, wheat and paddy crops.

NATIONAL CALAMITY: Massive flooding in eastern India has caused a “national calamity”, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said on Thursday after touring the devastated region where more than a million remain trapped.

He announced a relief package of $228 million and 125,000 tonnes of grain for those affected when a monsoon-swollen river changed course, flooding huge swathes of the country’s impoverished Bihar state.

“If there is a need for more, we will give more,” he told reporters. “We would like to assure the people of Bihar that all India will support them through this difficulty.” The Kosi river breached its banks ten days ago on the border with Nepal, flowing through a channel it had previously abandoned.

“About 90,000 victims have been evacuated from villages in the flood affected area by government rescue agencies,” disaster management official Prataya Amrit said.

More than 400 boats had been pressed into service and hundreds more would be used to shift people to relief shelters and higher land, official Amrit said.

At least 46 people are reported to have died in the floods, as army troops and air force helicopters rushed to help police in the rescue operation.

Thousands of residents abandoned their homes as the floodwater spread and have taken shelter in crowded relief camps or in buildings on higher ground.

Nepalese disaster management officials said the river had washed away a series of dams and spurs, which control the water, sending huge torrents downstream that washed away further flood defences.

Authorities on both sides of the border have been in dispute over maintenance of flood control structures and uncleared silt, officials said.

The Kosi, which flows into the Ganges, is known as the “River of Sorrow” due to its record of disastrous floods during the monsoon season.

More than 800 people have been killed in monsoon-related accidents following the heavy June-to-September rains across India.

Bihar officials said the death toll could climb further as many areas were inaccessible.—Agencies

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