Torrential monsoon rains in the aftermath of Cyclone Komen
continue to cause flooding in India, Bangladesh and other South Asian
countries, leaving hundreds dead and millions displaced.
In India, at
least 206 have been killed due to monsoon-related accidents, according to
government officials.
Late Tuesday, a
flooded bridge derailed two trainscarrying as many as 1,600 passengers
traveling in Madhya Pradesh, killing dozens.
In West Bengal, 97 are dead while hundreds of thousands of
people have been moved to relief camps to escape the floods. Though there has
been a respite in rainfall, the largest problem is now overflowing dams and
rivers which have risen above danger levels.
Elsewhere in
India, roads, dams, and rivers are overflowing, sending floodwater into
villages and forcing local residents to flee their homes.
Pakistan
Other countries in the region are also
experiencing extreme difficulties due to heavy rains.
In Pakistan, the
flooding has affected over one million people, killing 166 and forcing 803,271
people to evacuate their homes, according to Pakistan's National Disaster
Management Authority. The government has set up over 70,000 tents and has
distributed over 4,000 tons of food to the worst-affected areas.
Myanmar
Meanwhile in Myanmar, severe flooding
has caused the death toll to reach at least 88 while 330,000 others have been
affected, according to a state-run newspaper, which cited government officials.
The government
says flooding has destroyed 10,956 homes and 217,580 acres of farmland,
displacing 85,400.
The U.N. and other international NGO's have stepped up aid
efforts, distributing more than 387 metric tons of food for 103,000 people, and
620,000 water treatment tablets, as of Thursday.
"Thousands
of people have lost homes, livelihoods, crops and existing food and seed
stocks. Food security will be seriously affected," said World Food
Programme Country Director Dom Scalpelli. "In coordination with the
Myanmar Government, we are acting quickly to provide emergency relief and
prevent this disaster from exacerbating existing food insecurity and malnutrition."
U.S. Secretary
of State, John Kerry, announced $600,000 of immediate relief through USAID to
help the country meet its most urgent needs, at an ASEAN summit in Kuala
Lumpur, Malaysia, on Thursday.
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