
17 wards affected by floods, 22 people shifted to relief camp
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Prayagraj: The rising Ganga and Yamuna have hit 17 wards of the Sangam city with 22 people from five families shifting to a flood relief camp on Thursday.
The areas affected include Kachar Mau, Sariya, Rajapur, Beli Kachar, Beli Uparhar, Baghara, Newada, Myorabad, Bakhtiyara, Dhokri Uparhar, Sonauti, Badra and Delhi Bagesar.
Officials admitted that road connectivity to three villages, including Sonauti and Badra of Phulpur and Delhi Bhagesar of Karchana, was hit.
The local administration also deployed as many as six boats and distributed food packets to those affected.
"District authorities are monitoring the situation on hourly basis. An alert has been sounded in low-lying areas, and teams of SDMs and other officials are conducting surveys of affected areas.
All necessary arrangements have been made and govt machinery is ready to deal with any situation," said district magistrate Manish Kumar Verma.
Officials of the flood control department attributed the rise to the release of additional water by dams or tributaries of major rivers in neighbouring states.
The authorities have already sounded an alert on riverbank areas and activated as many as 98 flood outposts.
By 12 noon, the water level of both rivers at all three recording sites was rising alarmingly.
by Taboola
by Taboola
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The water level of Ganga at Phaphamau was 82.50m, and at Chhatnag it was 82m. Yamuna was flowing at 82.54m at Naini, 2m below the danger mark of 84.73 m.
At 4 pm, the water level of Ganga at Phaphamau and Chhatnag was reported at 82.60m and 82.14m respectively while the level of Yamuna was 82.61m at Naini.
Officials said the water level of Ganga rose 10cm and 14cm in the past four hours at Phaphamau and Chhatnag respectively by 4 pm.
"With the water level rising at a brisk pace for the past 48 hours, it would surely be entering houses and colonies in low-lying areas, and then we would be moving to safer places," said Guddi of Rajapur.
Majority of ghats on both rivers have already been inundated.

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