Floods to get worse in Andhra, eases in Odisha; 48 dead
HT Correspondent, Hindustan Times Hyderabad/Bhubaneswar, October 26, 2013
First Published: 13:42 IST(26/10/2013) | Last Updated: 22:21 IST(26/10/2013)
Thirty-two people dead, 15,000 houses collapsed across 4,000 villages, 72,000 people evacuated and crops over 564,000 hectares destroyed – the floods in Andhra Pradesh are getting worse by the hour. And the deluge can only get worse, with more rains expected in the next 48 hours.
Roads are flooded as heavy rains continue to lash Srikakulam and Nalgonda districts in Andhra Pradesh. (PTI photo)
For now, the Andhra Pradesh government appears ill prepared to handle the rain fury, which has been continuing for the last five days. Though the National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) has been pressed into service and chief minister Kiran Kumar Reddy has asked officials to take up rescue and relief measures on a war footing, the going is slow at best.
Of the 16 affected districts, the NDRF has been active in the worst-hit Srikakulam, West Godavari, Prakasam, Guntur, Nalgonda and Mahabubnagar districts. In the rest, the state machinery is at work.
Roads flooded due to heavy rains in Srikakulam and Nalgonda districts of Andhra Pradesh. (PTI Photo)
But that has not helped much. Road and rail routes have been badly hit – huge stretches of train tracks are under water, so are parts of the Vijayawada-Hyderabad highway. Overall, 935 km of roads have been damaged.
Flood affected blocks of Hinjili and Ganjam in Odisha. (Arabinda Mahapatra/HT Photo)
“Altogether, 405 minor irrigation tanks have been damaged and breaches have occurred to canals in different districts,” said disaster management commissioner T Radha. The chief minister has already asked officials to accord top priority to repair and restoration of these tanks.
Jharkhand feels the heatFloods in Odisha threatened to inundate the low-lying areas of Jamshedpur in Jharkhand, while floodwater rushed into a dozen villages in Ichagarh block of Seraikela-Kharsawan district, after all 13 gates of Chadil Dam were opened with the water level at 181.70 metres, crossing the previous highest level of 181.60 metres.
Water levels in Kharkai and Subarnarekha rivers are also rising due to the incessant rain in Odisha, resulting in the opening of one gate of Byanbil Dam in Mayurbhanj district.
(With inputs from Bhubaneswar and Ranchi)
A villager carries a child through a flooded road after heavy rains in Khurda district of Odisha. (Reuters Photo)
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