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Monsoon fury in Himachal: 69 dead, dozens missing as landslides and floods wreak havoc

Monsoon fury in Himachal: 69 dead, dozens missing as landslides and floods wreak havoc

First Post18 hours ago
Heavy rains have played havoc in some parts of the country with 69 people getting killed and 37 missing in Himachal Pradesh in the last two weeks. read more
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Heavy rains have played havoc in some parts of the country with at least 69 people have lost their lives, 37 remain missing, and 110 have been injured as Himachal Pradesh continues to grapple with the devastating impact of relentless monsoon rains, Chief Minister Sukhvinder Singh Sukhu said on Friday.
Days of heavy and continuous rainfall have triggered cloudbursts, flash floods, and landslides across the hill state, leaving a trail of destruction and prompting large-scale rescue and relief operations.
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A red alert for heavy rainfall remains in effect for all districts until Monday, July 7, with authorities warning of further disruptions. Emergency teams have been deployed to the worst-hit areas, while roads and infrastructure across multiple districts have suffered extensive damage.
The Chief Minister said 'Since the rains began, 69 people have lost their lives, 37 people are missing, 110 people have been injured, and damages worth approximately Rs 700 crore have been incurred… Roads and water projects have been damaged, electricity wires and poles have been uprooted, causing significant losses. Such devastation has struck Himachal Pradesh at the very onset of the monsoon."
He further said that incidents of cloudbursts have been reported at 14 locations. 'We are studying why cloudburst incidents are occurring so frequently… The 92 students who were stranded at the Horticulture College have been rescued… Reports of extensive damage are coming in from all areas. The government stands with the disaster-affected families and has decided to provide Rs 5,000 to affected families for renting accommodation,' he added.
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Residents of Odisha's capital Bhubaneswar continued to face a harrowing time as several low-lying areas remained waterlogged on Friday. The Bhubaneswar Municipal Corporation (BMC) struggled to clear the water as the drainage system went kaput.
Heavy rains in several parts of Madhya Pradesh crippled normal life on Friday, with the IMD issuing a 'red alert' for Mandla, Seoni and Balaghat districts in the eastern part of the state. Rain lashed more than 27 districts in the last 24 hours, officials said.
The national highway connecting Jabalpur and Mandla districts witnessed traffic snarls after a landslide on the stretch caused by rains, the officials said.
The monsoon hit Himachal Pradesh on June 20 and has already cost the state Rs 5,000 in damages due to cloudbursts, flash floods and landslides.
Of the 43 people killed in the hill state, 14 died in cloudbursts, eight in flash floods and one in a landslide, while seven were drowned. The most deaths, 17, took place in Mandi district where 10 instances of cloudbursts, flash floods and landslides wreaked havoc on Tuesday.
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A search is still on for 31 people missing from this district alone, officials said.
On Friday, the soldiers from the National Disaster Response Force rescued 65 people trapped in Bharad, Deji, Payala and Rukchui villages after heavy rain.
The downpour, followed by landslides, damaged roads and caused rivers to swell, which cut off many villages and deposited debris to people's houses and fields.
More than 150 houses, 106 cattle sheds, 31 vehicles, 14 bridges and several roads have suffered damage, while 164 cattle have perished in the various inclemencies.
Five relief camps have been set up to house the 402 people rescued, 348 of them from Mandi alone.
The State Emergency Operation Centre (SEOC) said 280 roads, including 156 in Mandi, 49 in Sirmaur and 36 in Kullu districts, were rendered out of bounds for vehicular traffic. It said 332 transformers and 784 water supply schemes have been disrupted in the state.
The local Met office has issued an orange alert, warning of heavy to very heavy rain in isolated parts of the state from Saturday to Tuesday.
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Amid heavy rains in another hill state, Uttarakhand, two IAF personnel drowned in a swollen lake in Bhimtal, officials said on Friday.
Prince Yadav (22) from Pathankot, Punjab and Sahil Kumar (23) from Muzaffarpur in Bihar were part of a group of eight IAF personnel, including four women, vacationing in Nainital, Circle Officer Pramod Shah said.
Locals joined the police in the rescue operation to pull Yadav and Kumar's bodies out of the lake after a struggle that lasted almost an hour, he added.
The rains which have been battering the state have affected daily life with the closure of more than 100 roads across the state, disrupting the Chardham Yatra and causing food grain shortages in some villages in the Geeth area of Uttarkashi district.
Home Minister Amit Shah spoke with Uttarakhand Chief Minister Pushkar Singh Dhami on Friday to assess the situation in the disaster-sensitive districts of the state, including Kedarnath Dham in the Rudraprayag district.
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Dhami shared this development in a post on X, stating that the Home Minister assured him that the Central Government's emergency relief agencies, including the NDRF and ITBP, are being deployed promptly. This is to ensure that the Chardham Yatra remains uninterrupted and that devotees do not experience any inconvenience while travelling.
In the eastern part of the country, waterlogging continues in low-lying areas of Bhubaneswar. BMC Commissioner Rajesh Prabhakar Patil visited some of the affected areas, including Laxmisagar and Badagada and instructed civic personnel to clear the water on a war footing.
In some good news, train services to parts of Northeast — Tripura, Mizoram, Manipur and Assam's Barak Valley — were restored on Friday, a day after disruptions due to landslide in Dima Hasao district, an official statement said.
A Northeast Frontier Railway (NFR) release said services on the Lumding-Badarpur hill section were successfully restored in the morning.
Services were disrupted between Dihakho and Mupa stations on Thursday evening, as large boulders fell on the tracks following the landslide.
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Continuous efforts throughout the night ensured the debris was cleared and the tracks were safely restored, the NFR statement said.
Overcast conditions and drizzle covered Delhi on Friday, with the national capital under an orange alert amid forecasts of light to moderate rain, thunderstorms, or lightning, the India Meteorological Department (IMD) said.
The city is under an orange alert, according to the IMD, with a warning of light to moderate rain accompanied by thunderstorms or lightning.
To ensure animal safety and prevent flooding in enclosures during heavy rainfall, the National Zoological Park in Delhi has ramped up staff preparedness, initiated key infrastructure repairs, ordered new water pumps and adopted traditional remedies like turmeric and neem oil to deal with seasonal infections and flies.
Last year, the zoo faced a lengthy power outage and flooding in several enclosures after water entered a transformer.
In western India, Pokhran in Rajasthan's Jaisalmer district recorded 128 mm of rain in a day under the influence of the southwest monsoon, even as a few areas in the state continued to reel under intense heat.
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Widespread rainfall was observed across the state in 24 hours till Friday morning, with heavy to very heavy showers reported in parts of western Rajasthan, the weather department said.
With inputs from agencies
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