213 killed in floods, landslides in South Asia

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AFP :
At least 213 people have been killed in floods and landslides triggered by heavy monsoon rains across South Asia over the past month, officials said on Thursday.
More than 1 million people have been marooned in Nepal, Bangladesh, and India and hundreds of thousands have fled their homes for higher ground.
Indian officials said that floods and mudslides killed 16 more people in the country’s northeast, raising the death toll in the country to 93.
Nepal reported at least 117 deaths over the past month.
Rains caused the RiverBrahmaputra, which flows through Tibet, India, and Bangladesh, to burst its banks in India’s Assam state late last month, inundating large swathes of the state, triggering mudslides and displacing about 3.6 million people, officials said.
Vast tracts were still underwater with 26 of the state’s 33 districts badly affected.
Authorities rescued about 4,000 people trapped by the surging flood waters in various parts of Assam, said MS Mannivanan, chief of the state Disaster Management Authority. About 36,000 people whose homes were destroyed or submerged have taken shelter in nearly 300 government-run relief camps, he said.
The floods also inundated most of India’s Kaziranga National Park, home to an estimated 2,500 rare one-horned rhinos, authorities said.
In the eastern state of Bihar, at least nine rivers swollen by heavy downpours in Nepal rose beyond their danger levels and inundated many villages. One of them, the RiverGandak, swept away the connecting roads of a newly built multimillion dollar bridge in Bihar’s Gopalganj district, disrupting transportation in the area.
The Meteorological Centre in the state capital, Patna, forecasted heavy rain over the next 48 hours.
Nepal’s home ministry said that 117 people had died in the Himalayan nation in monsoon-related incidents. It said that the rains triggered landslides in mountainous areas and flooding in the southern plains. At least 47 people were reported missing and 126 have been injured in the past month, it said.

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