At least 113 people killed in flooding across northern India

Boats deployed in city of Patna to rescue residents, 900 inmates moved from prison

State Disaster Response Force personnel on boats travel along a flooded road of a residential neighborhood of Bahadurpur following heavy rainfalls in Patna in the Indian state of Bihar on September 30th. Photograph:  Sachin Kumar/AFP/Getty
State Disaster Response Force personnel on boats travel along a flooded road of a residential neighborhood of Bahadurpur following heavy rainfalls in Patna in the Indian state of Bihar on September 30th. Photograph: Sachin Kumar/AFP/Getty

Heavy rains have killed at least 113 people in India’s Uttar Pradesh and Bihar states over the past three days, officials said on Monday, as flood waters swamped a major city, inundated hospital wards and forced the evacuation of inmates from a jail.

India’s monsoon season that begins in June usually starts to retreat by early September, but heavy rains have continued across parts of the country this year, triggering floods.

An official said that at least 93 people had died in most populous Uttar Pradesh since Friday after its eastern areas were lashed by intense monsoon showers.

Rising water levels forced authorities to shift 900 inmates from a prison in eastern Ballia district, police officer Santosh Verma said.

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Patients and their relatives rest in beds as they wade through floodwaters during heavy monsoon rain at waterlogged Nalanda Medical College and Hospital in Patna on September 28th. Photograph: Sachin Kumar/AFP/Getty
Patients and their relatives rest in beds as they wade through floodwaters during heavy monsoon rain at waterlogged Nalanda Medical College and Hospital in Patna on September 28th. Photograph: Sachin Kumar/AFP/Getty

In neighbouring Bihar, an impoverished agrarian region that was hit by floods earlier this year, the death toll from the latest bout of rain had reached 20 on Monday, a state government official said.

Bihar’s capital city of Patna, home to around 2 million, has been badly hit, with waist-deep flood waters across many streets, and entering homes, shops, and even the wards of a major hospital. In some parts, authorities deployed boats to rescue residents.

“The rains have stopped but there is waterlogging in many areas,” Bihar’s Additional Secretary in the Disaster Relief Department Amod Kumar Sharan said.

In its bulletin on Monday, India’s Meteorological Department said the intensity of rainfall over Bihar was very likely to reduce. Showers in Uttar Pradesh are also expected to abate this week.

Weather department officials said this month that monsoon rains were likely to be above average for the first time in six years. – Reuters