Rain fury threatens hundreds of villages; toll crosses 200

Andhra Pradesh geared up for more floods as a swollen Krishna river inundated parts of Vijayawada city and threatened to swamp 200 villages.

Zeenews Bureau

Vijayawada/Bellary: Andhra Pradesh geared up for more floods as a swollen Krishna river Monday inundated parts of Vijayawada city and threatened to swamp 200 villages in Krishna and Guntur districts, while the overall flood situation continued to be grim in the rest of the state. The rains and flood have displaces about a million people.

The death toll in the two states devastated by the
unseasonal rains in northern Karnataka and floods downstream
crossed the 200 mark.

Many colonies along the left bank of Krishna river in
Vijayawada city got submerged as the flood level touched four
feet this evening. The situation is expected to remain grim
till Wednesday as the flood discharge at Prakasam Barrage will
continue to be over 11 lakh cusecs, officials said.

The authorities are constantly monitoring the level at the Prakasam barrage across the Krishna river and they said if Monday night passed without much damage to the 200 villages downstream in the two districts the threat would be averted.

The focus of the flood threat has now shifted to the coastal areas. Kurnool and Mahbubnagar districts, which bore the brunt of the flood fury during the last four days, are struggling to come back to normalcy. Though the officials have put the death toll at 49, it could go up as dozens of people are still reported missing.
The inflows in the Prakasam barrage have crossed a record million cusecs, inundating parts of Vijayawada, one of the state`s biggest cities with 1.2 million people, located on the banks of the river. Dozens of villages downstream have submerged while thousands of people are being evacuated. More than 200,000 people have been evacuated in Krishna and Guntur districts.

The weakening embankments at a few points along the river have raised the spectre of inundation of vast areas and authorities have mobilised 300,000 sand bags to strengthen the embankments.

The water level at the barrage, the last irrigation project across Krishna river before it falls in the Bay of Bengal, stands at 21.5 feet.

Though authorities said there was no threat to the barrage, the weakening embankments at a few points was worrying.

The barrage has never faced such massive inflows in its history.

UPA Chairperson Sonia Gandhi undertook an aerial
survey of the ravaged areas in Bellary district and Chief
Minister B S Yeddyurappa, who accompanied her, said the state
suffered an unprecedented damage exceeding Rs 20,000 crore.

Torrential rains left a trail of death and destruction
in 15 districts of Karnataka damaging over two lakh houses in
1,467 villages subsided since yesterday. The official toll in
Karnataka was put at 194 while Andhra Pradesh registered 39
deaths.

Bijapur district bore the brunt of the rain fury with
31 deaths followed by Raichur and Bagalkote (26 each). Over
4.53 lakh people have been sheltered in 13,330 relief camps.

A 500 m-long bridge across Tungabhadra river, 32 km
from Raichur, was washed away in flood waters, officials said.
The Krishna river experienced the heaviest flood since
1903, when it had 10.30 lakh cusecs of flood waters.

Krishna District Collector Piyush Kumar said army, navy and the National Disaster Response Force were ready with 100 boats and six helicopters to rescue people in the district.

Vehicular traffic on the Hyderabad-Vijayawada highway came to a standstill as the highway was under water at several points.

However, receding water levels at Srisailam dam and in the tributaries of Krishna have provided some respite to Kurnool and Mahbubnagar, where 1.1 million people have been affected. People are returning to their homes in Kurnool town and other affected areas to only find that they have lost everything.

Pathetic scenes were witnessed in the affected areas as men and women were trying to salvage whatever they could from the slush in their damaged houses. Debris, garbage and carcasses of cattle washed away by floods were seen scattered all over. Sanitation workers were having a tough time to take up cleaning work.

Ministers and officials who visited the affected areas had to face the ire of the people who protested the tardy relief work. Some people alleged that cleaning work was being taken up only in a few areas.

About 500 villages were inundated by the floods that impacted over 1.8 million people in five districts. About 70,000 houses were damaged in five districts while over 400,000 people were rendered homeless.

The state government has doubled the compensation for the families of the victims to Rs.200,000.

Revenue and Relief Minister Dharmana Prasada Rao said the state government had done well to keep the loss of lives to the minimum. "In neighbouring Karnataka over 200 people were killed in heavy rains and floods while despite facing worst-ever floods the death toll in our state is under 50," he said.

"Experts have told us that such calamity occurs once in 1,000 years."

The state has estimated the loss due to the floods at Rs.12,225 crore and sought immediate assistance of Rs.6,000 crore from the centre.

IANS inputs

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