Perilous
Times
26 die in Indian floods, 200,000 evacuated
by Staff Writers
Bhubaneswar, India (AFP) Sept 15, 2011
At least 26 people have died and nearly 200,000 have been
evacuated as a result of massive flooding in the eastern Indian
state of Orissa, a minister said on Thursday.
The floods were triggered by torrential monsoon rains across
Orissa, causing water levels to breach river banks, prompting a
huge rescue operation in which helicopters dropped off emergency
supplies to help the stranded.
"The floods have killed 26 people and 12 others are missing,"
Orissa's Disaster Management Minister Surya Narayan Patra told AFP
in the state capital Bhubaneswar, painting a picture of widespread
devastation.
"We have evacuated 193,000 people to relative safety," he added,
warning that the death toll was likely to rise.
He added that a total of 2.1 million people in the state of 40
million people had been affected in some way or another with
floodwaters entering their homes or their crops submerged.
Thousands of people perched on highways and on rooftops to escape
the floods -- an annual feature in the coastal state which is also
prone to cyclones and tidal surges.
Nineteen of impoverished Orissa's 30 districts have been declared
"flood affected," Patra said, adding that nearly 4,100 villages
were "waterlogged" while access to nearly 1,300 of them was
completely cut off.
Orissa's special relief commissioner Pradeep Kumar Mohapatra told
reporters that some 300 relief centres were working round the
clock to help the flood afflicted areas.
Helicopters were dropping food and other essential supplies to
those trapped by the water in Orissa, he said.
Floods in neighbouring Pakistan have killed at least 270 people
and left 200,000 homeless, according to the latest official count.