Floods
and landslides claim hundreds in India
Floods
and landslides caused by monsoon rains have killed around 800 people
in northern India.
Thousands
remain unaccounted for and help still is not reaching the worst-hit
areas as many of the roads in the region remain closed.
And
state institutions are doing little to ease the aftermath of the
disaster.
India
fears 5,500 may have died in floods
Authorities
have raised to 5,500 the estimated number of people who perished in
devastating floods that swept the northern Indian state of
Uttarakhand last month.
MSN,
9
July, 2013
At
least 1,000 residents, Hindu pilgrims and tourists have been
confirmed killed by the surging waters caused by heavier than normal
monsoon rains that washed away homes, hotels, highways and cars.
"The
total number of people still missing is 4,500," Chief Minister
Vijay Bahuguna told a news conference in mountainous Uttarakhand
state capital Dehradun on Monday.
Late
last month authorities estimated the number of people missing in the
Himalayan state to be 3,000.
"We
will wait until July 15 and after that they (the missing) will be
presumed dead and the process of compensation will start,"
Bahuguna added.
The
government has promised to pay 500,000 rupees ($8,196) to families of
each of those killed in the June 15 floods, which triggered
widespread landslides.
Officials
say some people initially reported missing may have returned home or
continued with their travels, failing to notify authorities that they
were safe.
Rescue
workers have recovered bodies from rivers hundreds of kilometres
(miles) downstream from the flood zone, underscoring the difficulties
in finding all those killed in the floods.
A
state lawmaker last month warned the death toll could exceed 10,000
in Uttarakhand, which is popular among Hindu devotees who throng
local shrines during the June-September pilgrimage period.
Uttarakhand
Chief Secretary Subhash Kumar said a 75-member rescue team was
marooned in Kedarnath Valley after reaching the hilly region on July
3 and that the rescuers were running out of food.
"They
are now rationing the food they carried for themselves," Kumar
told reporters.
He
added that 60 of the rescuers were sick from drinking contaminated
water in corpse-littered Kedarnath, a popular Hindu pilgrimage site.
He
said relief supplies have been sent to 250 villages that are still
cut off in Uttarakhand and added that state workers stocked up stores
in 92 remote hamlets with supplies for residents.
Thousands
of Indian soldiers, backed by military helicopters, have been winding
down massive rescue efforts.
More
than 100,000 people stranded in the state have been evacuated.
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