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21 dead and 50,000 in shelters as monsoon floods swamp northeast India

Hindu devotees walk from the flooded banks of river Ganga after heavy monsoon rains that caused the rise of water levels in Allahabad. (Photo by Ravi Prakash/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images).
Hindu devotees walk from the flooded banks of river Ganga after heavy monsoon rains that caused the rise of water levels in Allahabad. (Photo by Ravi Prakash/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images).

GAUHATI, India – Monsoon floods have inundated hundreds of villages across the northeast Indian state of Assam, killing at least 21 people in the last four days and forcing some 800,000 people to leave their homes.

The state’s disaster management authority said Tuesday some 50,000 people were sheltering in 168 relief camps across rain-soaked state, with others staying with family or friends.

Most of the flooding was caused when rivers, including the Brahmaputra and its tributaries, overflowed their banks. At least 1,600 villages have been affected, with the worst-hit in Dibrugarh district.

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Some of the 21 killed were washed away in rivers, including a mother and son swept downriver in the raging Sessa.

“I feel helpless. The swirling, grey waters of the Brahmaputra look menacing,” said tribal council administrator Ranoj Tegu.

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“Thousands of people are living lives of misery. In some cases, people are living with one meal a day” as people struggle to find dry places for cooking or harvesting firewood, Tegu said by telephone from the council headquarters in Gogamukh in Dibrugarh district, adding that the greatest needs were clean drinking water and food. “People are being forced to drink turbid floodwaters.”

Many of the 120,000 people living on Majuli Island, the world’s largest river island, have taken refuge along with their cattle and poultry in bamboo shelters built on stilts as water gushes across the island below.

Wild animals including elephants, deer, buffalo and some of the 2,500 endangered one-horn rhinos in the Kaziranga National Park have moved to higher ground. Forest rangers are patrolling the swamped park in wooden rowboats, as well as patrolling a highway that borders the 480-square-kilometre park to keep motorists from speeding.

The northeast Indian region, located between Bangladesh and Myanmar, is prone to flooding during the June-to-September annual monsoon season.

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