July 31, 2005

Monsoon India July 2005

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Complete breakdown in Mumbai, 108 Dead
 
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/1184241.cms
 
MUMBAI: A weary and sodden Mumbai, which was lashed by the highest ever rainfall recorded in three decades, woke up on Wednesday to find that the second day was barely a little better than the first: landslides, deaths, water and power cuts, food shortages, erratic telephone links, and no trains.

And, in a cruel irony, a fire in the middle of the flood.
While South Mumbai, which recorded barely two inches of rainfall, was like Noah's Ark in the midst of the deluge, untouched and afloat, the suburbs went under.

At least 108 people, including nine children, were killed in landslides in Andheri and Nerul. With highways flooded, airports closed and train services halted, there was no way of getting in to or out of Mumbai.


Until late Wednesday afternoon, many schoolchildren were stranded in their schools or en route home and workers who had left their offices the previous evening had still not made it home.

Those who spent Tuesday night in their offices, took whatever form of transport was available in the morning to make their way home, with some even hopping on to tow trucks and police vans. It was rush hour at noon.
Trains showed no signs of starting with the tracks still under water, and at Dombivli it was hard to tell where the platform ended and the tracks began since the water level was so high.
People wading through water were horrified to see carcasses of buffaloes, and in one case at Juhu Circle, the body of a man curled up and lying on the road.

Stalled BEST buses and cars were left standing in the middle of roads, and many key arteries, such as the Mahim causeway, had traffic backed up on them for hours. In Kalina, passengers were forced to take refuge on the roof of a BEST bus, which was window-deep in water.


After remaining comatose for over 24 hours, perhaps for the first time in its history, Mumbai airport may come back to life by Thursday afternoon, provided the rain gods show mercy.

Airports Authority of India director Sudhir Kumar said water which flooded the runway on Tuesday had receded. "The Instrument Landing Systems which were immersed in water are being examined. But operations can begin with visual approach landing," he said.
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/msid-1184241,curpg-2.cms
 

 
 
MUMBAI: Thousands of office-goers in Mumbai began their day in the office on Wednesday, after being stranded at the workplace overnight as suburban trains and buses did not ply since Tuesdsay and Mumbai continued to remain cut-off by land, rail and air links with the rest of the country.

The state government declared a public holiday as several areas of the city continued to be submerged and heavy rains continued to lash the commercial capital for the second consecutive day on Wednesday. Tuesday's rainfall had literally left Mumbaikars in the dark with large scale enforced power cuts (as a cautionary measure against short circuits and electrocution).

While city power utility Reliance Energy started restoring electricty supply to several parts of the metropolis on Wednesday, efforts were still on to rectify power situation in the remaining areas.

On Wednesday, the CM Vilasrao Desmukh urged people to stay in their homes and not venture out as heavy rains were forecast for the next 48 hours.

Monsoon Death Toll Nears 700 in India

By RAMOLA TALWAR BADAM
The Associated Press
Friday, July 29, 2005; 12:11 AM

BOMBAY, India -- Rescuers working beneath leaden skies pulled bodies from rivers of mud and piles of water-soaked debris Friday as they searched for survivors of record-breaking monsoon rains that killed almost 700 people.

A stampede set off by rumors of a dam burst late Thursday also killed at least 15 people, including seven children, and injured more than 25 in a Bombay shantytown, said R.R. Patil, deputy chief minister of Maharashtra state.

People in the Nehru Nagar slum in northern Bombay panicked after hearing the rumors in the wake of landslides set off by two days of rains that began Tuesday and buried alive dozens of Bombay residents and cut off neighboring villages.

"People died due to false rumors," Patil told The Associated Press. "Fifteen people have been killed and seven are children."

He said police vans with loudspeakers had been deployed to stem the panic.

On Friday, dozens of new bodies were found pushing the death toll to 696, officials said. Rescuers were searching vast areas in the western Maharashtra state battered rain, said N. Nayar, an official at the government's emergency control room in Bombay.

The crisis began Tuesday, when the cosmopolitan city that is home to India's financial and movie industries was hit by an unprecedented deluge of up to 37 inches of rain in some areas, the highest recorded one-day total in India's history. Much of it came over a few evening hours, transforming roads into fierce rivers.

The rains stretched into Wednesday, paralyzing Bombay and devastating wide swaths of surrounding Maharashtra state before they finally ended Thursday, leaving an overcast sky.

A government-ordered holiday kept workers at home Thursday as normally bustling Bombay, also known as Mumbai, struggled to get back on track. The Bombay Stock Exchange did not open, and many banks and other financial institutions remained shut.

Phone service was still spotty, some neighborhoods remained without electricity, and stretches of road were blocked by hundreds of cars abandoned when they stalled in the rain.

By evening, train service was back and the city's airports, among the busiest in the nation, were again open to flights.

In the northern Bombay suburb of Saki Naka, relief workers and survivors searched the ruins of a shantytown crushed when a water-soaked hill collapsed on top of it. While the complete toll was unclear, at least 110 people were killed, and more than 45 others were missing and presumed dead.


 
July 28
 

Bombay swamped by nightmare monsoon




THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The rain looked like a solid wall of water, and it just kept coming. Soaked, frightened parents walked for hours Wednesday to reach their children. Motorists spent the night marooned on traffic islands, watching bodies float past.

Victims were crushed by falling walls, trapped in cars or electrocuted as phone networks collapsed in torrential downpours - the strongest rains ever recorded in Indian history.

Every year, Bombay is brought to a halt for a day or two by heavy monsoon rains that drench the country between June and September and often leave hundreds dead nationwide. But scenes like these have never before been seen in this cosmopolitan city also known as Mumbai that is home to India's financial and movie industries.

"Most places in India don't receive this kind of rainfall in a year," said R.V. Sharma, director of the meteorological department in Bombay.

About 200 bodies were recovered after 37 inches fell in one day, and an additional 100 deaths were feared across Maharashtra state, where Bombay is the capital, deputy chief minister R.R. Patil told The Associated Press.

Traffic was backed up all night and into Wednesday across Bombay, with drivers abandoning their vehicles on roads turned into waist-high rivers.

Rajesh Khubchandani, a businessman, left his car and spent 15 hours marooned with several other people on a traffic island. "We saw two bodies floating past. I don't know how they died," Khubchandani said.

At one point, about 150,000 people were stranded in railway stations, state-run All India Radio reported. Others stayed for hours on buses and trains surrounded by swirling water.

"We were stuck in a bus all through the night with nothing to eat or drink. It was impossible to get out because there was water all around," said Yamini Patil, a government employee.

Television footage showed crowds of people scrambling for food parcels dropped from helicopters by navy rescue teams as the bodies of two men lay sprawled in the streets of a Bombay neighborhood.

While Wednesday's precipitation was still being totaled, officials said parts of the city had been hit by up to 37.1 inches of rain Tuesday, much of it falling over just a few hours.

Maharashtra's top elected official, Vilasrao Deshmukh, ordered a two-day work stoppage Wednesday to keep workers at home, and called out the military to help.

"Inflatable rafts will be used to reach stranded people. Please try to stay where you are," he said.

As floodwaters started subsiding Wednesday afternoon, the city began, just barely, to function. The road into Bombay's financial hub was cleared, though the two main highways, as well as hundreds of smaller roads, remained gridlocked. Skeletal train services connecting downtown areas to the suburbs resumed Wednesday afternoon, and flights at the airport resumed later.

Param Singh wept with relief after he walked nine hours through rain-flooded streets to reach his daughter's school, where she was among the hundreds of schoolchildren who spent the night in suburban schools.

"It was horrible not knowing where she was, if she was stuck in a bus or alone at home since my wife is out of Bombay on work. I literally wept when I saw her," said Singh, his clothes drenched as he hugged his daughter.

Rescuers started arriving Tuesday night in the village of Kondivali, 95 miles south of Bombay, hoping to extricate nearly 100 people trapped by a landslide, said police officer S. Jadav. At least 30 more people were feared buried in another mudslide in the nearby village of Jui.

"We have no information from them, all lines are dead," said another officer, P. Ranade.

State police reported other landslides in Maharashtra's Raigad, Ratnagiri, Sindhudurg, and Kolhapur areas. Details weren't immediately available.

Home Minister Shivraj Patil said 633 people have died nationwide since June 1 in the heavy seasonal rains, which have washed away tens of thousands of homes, roads, railway tracks and bridges.

India's previous heaviest rainfall, recorded in the northeastern town of Cherrapunji - one of the rainiest places on Earth - was 33 inches on July 12, 1910, Sharma said.



 
 
 


Posted by worldkigo at 13:33