PATNA, Saturday (AFP) - More than 300,000 people trapped in India's worst floods in 50 years have been rescued but nearly double that number remain stranded without food or water, officials said Saturday.
About 60 people have died and three million people have been affected since the Kosi river breached its banks earlier this month on the border with Nepal and changed course, swamping hundreds of villages in eastern Bihar state.
Another 300,000 people have fled their homes and are living in government relief shelters, temples and high-rise government buildings. “Large-scale evacuation will continue until all the marooned people are rescued in the next three to four days,” disaster management official Prataya Amrit told AFP.
The government said the situation was unlikely to return to normal for months and the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) voiced fears about illnesses breaking out at congested relief camps.
“We will have to provide food and shelter to the survivors until October as they will not be able to return home,” the state's disaster management minister Nitish Mishra told AFP.
The government has set up more than 100 shelters, but officials said nearly 600,000 people were still waiting to be rescued.
The floods have caused extensive damage and disruption to roads, water and electricity supplies in the affected areas, UNICEF said.
“Essential commodities including food are now being transported by boat,”the UN body said in a statement.
Tens of thousands of people have been displaced in Nepal, where thousands of Indians seeking shelter from floods in Bihar have also migrated.
At least 15 people died and some were still missing after an army rescue boat carrying flood survivors capsized on Friday. |