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Dozens missing after flash floods and landslides in Himachal Pradesh

Dozens missing after flash floods and landslides in Himachal Pradesh

The Guardiana day ago
India's mountainous state of Himachal Pradesh has been left reeling after it was hit by rainstorms, flash floods and landslides, with dozens of people reported missing.
Hundreds of homes, bridges, roads and electricity pylons in the north Indian state were washed away after 23 flash floods and 16 landslides caused by unusually heavy rainfall over the weekend. There were also 19 cloudbursts, in which an enormous amount of rain falls in a sudden deluge, according to a report by the Himachal Pradesh state government.
Several districts remained on high alert for further landslides, with warnings of more rainfall this week.
Himachal Pradesh, a state that spans the mountainous terrain of the Himalayas, has suffered repeatedly in recent years as the climate emergency has led to the monsoon rains becoming erratic and falling in more intense, unmanageable bursts.
In 2023, large swathes of essential infrastructure in Himachal Pradesh was destroyed and more than 300 people lost their lives after destructive flooding across north India, caused by heavy rains.
Many of the state's biggest towns and cities are built on steep slopes, resulting in hundreds of homes – often built on insecure terrain – collapsing or being engulfed in mud due to landslides and flooding.
The state disaster management authority said the death toll from monsoon-related disasters had reached 78 so far this year, which included deaths from flash floods, electrocution and road accidents.
Rescue efforts were ongoing on Monday to find dozens of people still missing after the landslides, but officials said efforts had been hampered by the region's treacherous terrain and the destruction of vital roads. Many areas across the state were left isolated, without access to clean water and power.
One of the worst-affected urban areas was the town of Mandi in Himachal Pradesh. The town's MP, Bollywood star turned politician Kangana Ranaut – known for her often provocative statements – caused outrage after she said she did 'not have any funds for disaster relief or hold any cabinet post'.
Experts have repeatedly said the climate crisis is intensifying the risk of flooding in India to dangerous levels, due to increased rainfall, rising sea levels, and more extreme weather events, particularly during the monsoon period between June and September, when about 80% of the country's rain falls.
Serious flooding in June had already led to dozens of deaths in the north-eastern Indian states of Assam and Mizoram where the monsoon rains arrive earlier. The early arrival of heavy monsoon rains in Mumbai left large areas of the city under water, bringing the metropolitan area, home to about 24 million people, to a standstill.
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FACT FOCUS: No, weather modification did not cause the deadly flash floods in Texas
FACT FOCUS: No, weather modification did not cause the deadly flash floods in Texas

The Independent

time2 hours ago

  • The Independent

FACT FOCUS: No, weather modification did not cause the deadly flash floods in Texas

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Floods sweep away 18 people and bridge linking Nepal to China
Floods sweep away 18 people and bridge linking Nepal to China

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Floods sweep away 18 people and bridge linking Nepal to China

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Fears new ID rules could deny millions right to vote in key Indian election
Fears new ID rules could deny millions right to vote in key Indian election

The Independent

time11 hours ago

  • The Independent

Fears new ID rules could deny millions right to vote in key Indian election

India 's top election body is facing mounting criticism over its sweeping revision of voter registration ahead of an important state election in Bihar, with activists and opposition groups raising alarms over the potential for large-scale disenfranchisement in one of the country's poorest states. The drive to verify the identity of all of the state's 78 million voters, launched on 24 June ahead of elections later this year, has strict documentation requirements, triggering concerns it would lead to exclusion of vulnerable groups, especially those unable to produce the extensive paperwork required to prove their citizenship. The Election Commission of India has said that some 49.6 million voters whose names were included in a similar exercise in 2003 need not submit any further documents. This leaves almost 30 million voters potentially vulnerable. 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Under the new process, an estimated 29.3 million voters whose names are not listed in the 2003 rolls must now submit at least one of 11 specified documents to establish their eligibility. The deadline to submit these documents is 25 July. Under the new process, those not listed in the 2003 rolls must now submit at least one of 11 specified documents to establish their eligibility. The deadline to submit these documents is 25 July. The draft rolls will be published on 1 August, and a further period from 1 August to 1 September will allow electors to raise claims or objections before the final list of voters is released on 30 September. 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I didn't have a registered marriage,' he added. 'So in a country that has not relied on these documents, [requiring them] is a huge challenge.' Opposition leaders, including Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) Member of Parliament Manoj Jha, Trinamool Congress MP Mahua Moitra, activist Yogendra Yadav and civil society organisations like the Association for Democratic Reforms and the People's Union for Civil Liberties, have moved the Supreme Court to challenge the revision. They argue the SIR could result in the deletion of lakhs of voter names and would particularly harm women and socio-economically disadvantaged groups. The court has agreed to hear the matter on Thursday but has not stayed the exercise. The EC has said the SIR is necessary due to a range of issues: increased migration, urbanisation, young voters coming of age, unreported deaths, and the inclusion of ineligible names, including suspected illegal immigrants. Booth Level Officers (BLOs) are conducting door-to-door verification and collecting documentation. The commission maintains that every effort is being made to ensure the exercise does not inconvenience the elderly, the disabled, or economically disadvantaged voters. Nonetheless, doubts persist about how easily voters – particularly from marginalised backgrounds – can furnish the required paperwork. Bihar has historically had low levels of official documentation. The 11 documents deemed acceptable include passports, matriculation certificates, birth certificates, government-issued identity cards, and land allotment documents. But data reveals these are beyond the reach of many in the state. For instance, only around 1.57 per cent of Bihar's population was employed in government jobs as per the 2022 Bihar Caste Survey – one of the criteria under the EC's guidelines. Similarly, only two per cent of residents held valid passports as of 2023, and just 14.71 per cent had passed their Class 10 school exams, limiting access to matriculation certificates, reported the Indian Express. Birth registration has historically been poor in Bihar. In 2007, only 713,000 births were registered in a state that saw an estimated 2.8 million births that year, reported the outlet. Certificates like permanent residence documents and caste certificates often require applicants to first furnish other documents, such as Aadhaar (digital identification system) cards and voter IDs, which many lack. Land-related documents are also scarce, with more than 65 per cent of rural households reported to own no land, according to the Socio-Economic and Caste Census of 2011. Patel accuses the EC of failing to account for the socio-economic realities on the ground. 'We call on the Election Commission to be transparent: clarify timelines, ease document requirements, and robustly assist the poor, migrants, and marginalised so that no one is unjustly removed from the voter rolls,' he says. 'The right to vote is not a privilege handed out with a certificate – it is a constitutional guarantee.' Electoral Registration Officers (EROs), who are typically sub-divisional magistrates, are responsible for evaluating the applications and verifying documents. As per the Representation of the People Act, 1950, names can only be deleted or added after proper scrutiny. The commission's 24 June directive mandates that no name be struck off without inquiry and providing the concerned voter with an opportunity to respond. However, a particular section of the EC's instructions has drawn concern. It allows officials to refer 'cases of suspected foreign nationals' to the relevant authority under the Citizenship Act, raising fears of further targeting of minorities. Tejashwi Yadav, leader of the opposition in the Bihar Legislative Assembly, called the revision exercise a 'conspiracy'. 'The last time the routine process of revision of voter list was done was in 2003... it took about two years to complete,' he said. 'Now elections are to be held in November. Two months are left before the notification process begins. That means the Election Commission has to make a new list... of [80 million] people... in just 25 days. And that too when 73 per cent of the state is affected by floods!' Prime minister Narendra Modi 's Bharatiya Janata Party, which is part of the ruling coalition in Bihar, defended the process. State minister Nitin Nabin accused the Congress of trying to obstruct the removal of bogus names. 'If genuine voters are being verified and fake voters are being removed, is Congress sitting here to commit fraud?' he asked. 'Are you trying to gain power through fake votes?' Meanwhile, sources in the EC said similar exercises are being planned for West Bengal and New Delhi starting August, reported the New Indian Express. The last verification of voter rolls in West Bengal and Delhi took place in 2002 and 2008 respectively. In Delhi, individuals added to the electoral rolls after 16 March 2008 will be asked to prove their citizenship to remain on the list.

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