UN: monsoon floods hit more
than 25 million people in S. Asia
Health workers distributing medicines to flood affected people in Assam, India (ANSA) |
Parts of India, Bangladesh, Nepal and Myanmar are severely
hit by floods caused by monsoon rains.
By Robin Gomes
More than 25 million people are hit by flooding due to the torrential
monsoon rains in Bangladesh, India, Nepal and Myanmar, with more than half a
million people displaced, according to humanitarian groups collaborating with
United Nations agencies.
Parts of northern India are reeling under the onslaught of
the monsoon rains that are submerging vast areas.
Floods in Assam and Bihar states claimed the lives of 198
people lives on Thursday, and affected the lives of over 11.7 million, local
officials say.
In Assam, the death toll climbed to 75,
while the water level rose in seven districts of the state. The
Assam State Disaster Management (ASDMA) reported that nearly 3.4 million people
in 18 districts are affected by the deluge.
The floods are also taking a toll on the state’s wildlife,
especially at the Kaziranga National Park famed for his its one-horned
rhinoceros.
Meanwhile, heavy rainfall was also recorded across several
districts of Bihar in the last 24 hours, worsening the flood
scenario in the state. Seventeen lives were lost, bringing the death toll
in the current floods to 123.
The Bihar Disaster Management Department said some 8.2
million people in 13 districts were affected by the flood, and relief and
rehabilitation work was going on in full swing. The state has received
482.6 mm rainfall during this monsoon season.
In Bangladesh, severe flooding after two weeks
of heavy monsoon rains has killed more than 100 people, displaced nearly
800,000, and inundated thousands of homes in at least 26 of the low-lying delta
nation’s 64 districts.
Authorities estimate some 5 million people are struggling
with the impacts of the floods, the worst in two years. The latest death toll
as of Friday stood at 104.
In neighbouring Myanmar, floods hit 8 regions
and states recently due to heavy rainfall, forcing over 9,000 households to
evacuate to flood shelters, according to the Disaster Management Department.
Nepal's Home Ministry confirmed on Friday that the
number of deaths due to the floods and landslides across the Himalayan nation
rose to 111. Some 64 districts affected.
The grim situation in South Asian has also caught the
attention of the United Nations. Earlier on Thursday, Farhan Haq, deputy
spokesman for un secretary-general António Guterres, briefed reporters on the
situation in the region.
He said UN partner organizations in the region reported that
more than 25 million people have been affected by flooding due to the
torrential monsoon rains in Bangladesh, India, Nepal and Myanmar, with more
than half a million people displaced.
At least 600 people have reportedly been killed in
monsoon-related incidents.
In Bangladesh, he pointed out, more than 4 million people
have been affected, and the UN is helping to assess needs to determine the
necessary response and is also supporting the Government in the areas of water
and sanitation, as well as health.
In Myanmar, waters in some areas have receded, allowing some
of those who had been uprooted to return home, but over 40,000 people remain
displaced.
Haq said that governments in all four countries were leading
the response with support from the UN, aid agencies and the private
sector.
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