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“More than 700 people have died in India and Bangladesh since Sept. 18 when late monsoon rains flowed over riverbanks and dams, drowning the tree-lined frontier between the two countries under 10 feet of water.” |
India Flood Survivors
Desperate Floodwaters continued to rise Tuesday in West Bengal state, and an aid
worker said some stranded people were so hungry and desperate that they
were jumping from treetops into passing relief boats. More than 700 people have died in India and Bangladesh since Sept. 18
when late monsoon rains flowed over riverbanks and dams, drowning the
tree-lined frontier between the two countries under 10 feet of water. An additional 329 people have been killed by flooding in Southeast Asia,
where the Mekong River has burst its banks. The floods left more than 10 million people homeless in eastern India;
some 125,000 were reported homeless in Bangladesh. Grant Cassidy, a relief worker for World Vision, described desperate
scenes near Ranaghat, 40 miles north of Calcutta, the capital of Bengal
state. Cassidy and a relief team found refugees huddling under tarpaulin sheets
in muddy fields with scarce food supplies. He said floodwaters were rising
two to three inches a day. "People are living on rooftops and climbing into trees,"
Cassidy said in an interview from Calcutta, adding that some were so tired
and hungry that if a boat went by, they were flinging themselves from the
trees into the craft. "All sorts of ... small makeshift craft are bringing people
in," he said. Cassidy's team walked thigh-deep in water to reach
refugee camps on patches of higher ground. When they walked back a few
hours later on Monday, the water was waist high, although it was sunny and
hot, he said. "There are not enough boats," Cassidy said. "The national
highway is just an island. The military is doing its operations from
there." Calcutta itself was on alert after nearby sandbagged sluice gates
collapsed and floodwaters seeped into the city. Police advised people in
low-lying areas to move to safer places. Boatmen in Bihar, one of India's poorest states, have refused to carry
marooned villagers, claiming they were never paid for last year's flood
rescue work. Indian officials said a strike by state administrative
officers further hampered the rescue operations. Cassidy said no medicine had been delivered to fight waterborne disease,
and local agencies were cooking pots of rice and lentils for rationing.
The military has made some air drops, but the neediest people could still
be inaccessible, he said. In Bangladesh, the army used speedboats to rescue some villagers, said
regional politician Ayub Hossain. "The army is focusing on
evacuation, not on distribution of food and water." Officials say at least 125,000 people have lost their homes in Bangladesh
- mainly mud and thatch huts - but unofficial estimates say as many as
250,000 could be homeless. Authorities acknowledge 500,000 people were
marooned in their villages with no way out except by boat.
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