Meanwhile, in other parts of India the monsoon has failed.
Monsoon floods kill 11 in India, maroon thousands
Monsoon floods kill 11 in India, maroon thousands
GAUHATI, India -- Indian authorities rushed food and drinking water Saturday, June 28, to thousands of people marooned by monsoon rains and mudslides that left at least 11 dead in the remote northeast.
27
June, 2014
Residents
waded through waist- and knee-deep water in several parts of the
Assam state capital, Gauhati, which was hit by nearly 2.3 inches of
pounding rain on Thursday night. The average four-month monsoon
rainfall is 35 inches.
"Inflatable
boats and makeshift banana rafts have become a mode of transport in
the heart of Gauhati. This is something I didn't imagine," said
Rani Das, a researcher who could not reach her office on Saturday.
Loose
patches of earth rolled down the hills around Gauhati as light rain
continued on Saturday. Authorities closed schools for the day in the
city.
India's
Meteorological Department said the rains were caused by a strong
monsoon, while other parts of the country were experiencing 30 to 40
percent deficiency in rainfall in June. India's monsoon season lasts
from June to the end of September.
All
the 11 deaths in the past two days have been reported from Gauhati.
Police said they included a family of three who were buried when a
portion of a concrete house caved in on their tin-roofed home early
Friday. Another person died in a mudslide and five others were
electrocuted.
Chief
Minister Tarun Gogoi, Assam state's top elected official, waded
through the deluge to reach some of the worst-hit areas, but was
booed by residents angry over the lack of food and drinking water.
Elsewhere
in Assam state, monsoon rain fed the mighty Brahmaputra and other
rivers, flooding at least six of the state's 27 districts, including
vast swathes of crop area.
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