Death Toll Mounts to 43 in India's Flood-Hit Northeast

At least 43 people have died and many are missing in floods and landslides caused by heavy rains that lashed India's remote northeast, in the second flood tragedy to strike the subcontinent this month

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GUWAHATI India (Reuters) - At least 43 people have died and many are missing in floods and landslides caused by heavy rains that lashed India's remote northeast, officials said on Wednesday, in the second flood tragedy to strike the subcontinent this month.

Officials in the mountainous state of Meghalaya said at least 25 people had been drowned or died in landslides, with 24 more reported missing in the Garo Hills district of the state.

"The death toll could further rise, as more news starts coming from the submerged villages," said Pravin Bakshi, deputy commissioner of the West Garo Hills district.


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Villages were still inundated, even though water levels had receded in most of the affected areas, Bakshi added.

The damage caused by floods and landslides is "unprecedented", said Mukul Sangma, chief minister of Meghalaya, after making an aerial survey of the flood-hit areas.

In the tea- and oil-rich state of Assam, rescue workers pulled 12 more dead bodies from the flood waters, taking to 18 the death toll since Monday.

Power supply disruptions prevailed in most parts of Guwahati, the region's biggest city, adding to the woes of people wading through waterlogged homes.

Thousands of people in the affected areas, which are in western Assam, complained of an inadequate supply of relief materials and drinking water.

Operations at tea plantations and oil wells, which are concentrated in the eastern part of the state, have been unaffected by the floods.

Earlier this month, at least 460 people died in flooding in Indian-controlled Kashmir and neighboring Pakistan.

 

(Reporting by Biswajyoti Das; Writing by Malini Menon; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)

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