Rescue ongoing as 200 killed in Nepal Floods
Incessant rainfall over the weekend triggered floods and landslides, wreaking havoc in Kathmandu and most of the districts of Nepal
PTI
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A task force was also formed to assess the details of the damage caused within a 15-day deadline. PHOTO:PTI
Kathmandu, 30
Sept
Search and
rescue operations continued in Nepal for the third consecutive day on Monday
after monsoon-induced floods and landslides killed more than 200 people in one
of the worst rain-related disasters in the Himalayan nation in recent years.
Incessant
rainfall over the weekend triggered floods and landslides, wreaking havoc in
Kathmandu and most of the districts of Nepal.
At least
204 people have been killed in the continuous rainfall, floods, landslides and
inundation, MyRepublica news portal reported, quoting the Armed Police Force
(APF).
It added
that 89 others have also been injured nationwide in the disaster, while 33
others remain missing.
An
all-party meeting convened on Sunday by Officiating Prime Minister Prakash Man
Singh at the Prime Minister's Office in Singha Durbar decided to enhance
rescue, relief, and re-establishment efforts during the ongoing disaster caused
by heavy rains.
The Home
Ministry said it would provide grants for temporary housing construction,
repair blocked roads to restore transportation and ensure effective free health
treatment for citizens injured in disaster incidents.
A task
force was also formed to assess the details of the damage caused within a
15-day deadline, the news portal reported.
The
Disaster Management Executive Committee said it will provide a relief amount to
the families of those missing. If the missing person is not found within 10
days, their family will be provided the same amount as that given to the kin of
a person killed in the rain-induced disaster, the report said.
The Home
Ministry said all security agencies have been deployed for relief efforts
following the floods and landslides, and the Nepal Army, Nepal Police and Armed
Police Force personnel have rescued around 4,500 disaster-affected individuals
so far.
While those
injured are receiving free treatment, food and other emergency relief materials
have been provided to others affected by the floods.
Hundreds of
people are facing a shortage of food, safe drinking water and sanitation in
Kathmandu following the natural disaster, according to eyewitnesses.
Market
prices have also soared as vegetables coming from India and other districts of
the country have been temporarily halted due to obstruction in major highways
due to landslides.
Numerous
roads throughout the nation are severely damaged, and all routes leading to the
capital city, Kathmandu, are still blocked, leaving thousands of travellers
stranded, The Kathmandu Post newspaper reported.
Home
Ministry Spokesperson Rishiram Tiwari said efforts are underway to clear the
obstructed highways to resume transportation.
At least 20
hydropower plants with a combined capacity of 1100 MW suffered damages due to
floods and landslides triggered by the incessant rainfall in the past three
days, which has led to the disruption in power supply in Kathmandu and other
major cities.
"Heavy
rains since Friday have caused widespread flooding across Kathmandu Valley, and
across Nepal. This is the worst flooding experienced in recent years,"
said Jagan Chapagain, the Chief Executive Officer and Secretary General of the
International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, in a post on
X.
"In
response to the crisis, local branches of the @NepalRedCross are working
closely with authorities and (the) Emergency Operations Centre of Nepal Red
Cross to coordinate rescue and relief operations," he added.
Kathmandu's
main river, the Bagmati, was flowing above danger levels after incessant rain
lashed large swathes of eastern and central Nepal on Friday and Saturday, a
report published by the International Centre for Integrated Mountain
Development (ICIMOD) said.
"A
low-pressure system in the Bay of Bengal and the more northerly than usual
position of the monsoon trough was the reason" behind the exceptionally
intense rain, it said on Saturday.
Scientists
say that while climate change is changing the amount and timing of rainfall
across Asia, a key reason for the rise in the impact of floods is the built
environment, including unplanned construction, especially on floodplains, which
leaves insufficient areas for water retention and drainage.
The floods
and landslides have thrown life out of gear in many parts of the country, with
many highways and road stretches disrupted, hundreds of houses and bridges
buried or swept away, and hundreds of families displaced.
Thousands
of passengers have been stranded in various places due to road disruption.
During the
all-party meeting, it was also decided that the Ministry of Health and
Population will conduct awareness programmes and other initiatives in potential
and suitable locations to prevent the spread of diseases, as epidemics can
spread after such disasters. -PTI
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