Thousands stranded as floods submerge southern Indian state

Update Thousands stranded as floods submerge southern Indian state
1 / 11
This handout photo released by the Indian Navy on August 18, 2018 shows an Indian nurse holding a newborn boy next to the mother Sajita Jabeel (L), 25, in a hospital in Kochi, after she was rescued while heavily pregnant from a roof in a flood affected area of Kochi in the southern state of Kerala. (AFP)
Update Thousands stranded as floods submerge southern Indian state
2 / 11
TOPSHOT - View of a flooded area is pictured in the north part of Kochi, in the Indian state of Kerala on August 18, 2018. (AFP)
Update Thousands stranded as floods submerge southern Indian state
3 / 11
Indian Navy personnel provide food and drinking water at a flooded area in the north part of Kochi, in the Indian state of Kerala, on August 18, 2018. (AFP)
Update Thousands stranded as floods submerge southern Indian state
4 / 11
Rescuers used helicopters and boats on Friday to evacuate thousands of people stranded on their rooftops following unprecedented flooding in the southern Indian state of Kerala that killed more than 320 people in the past nine days, officials said. (AP/Tibin Augustine)
Update Thousands stranded as floods submerge southern Indian state
5 / 11
An aerial view shows partially submerged houses at a flooded area in the southern state of Kerala. (Reuters)
Update Thousands stranded as floods submerge southern Indian state
6 / 11
People are airlifted by the Indian Navy soldiers during a rescue operation at a flooded area in the southern state of Kerala. (Reuters)
Update Thousands stranded as floods submerge southern Indian state
7 / 11
Indian passengers travel in a truck to a safer place as flood waters ravaged the National Highway 47 in Ernakulam district of Kochi, in the Indian state of Kerala. (AFP)
Update Thousands stranded as floods submerge southern Indian state
8 / 11
Update Thousands stranded as floods submerge southern Indian state
9 / 11
Rescuers evacuate people from a flooded area to a safer place in Aluva in the southern state of Kerala. (Reuters)
Update Thousands stranded as floods submerge southern Indian state
10 / 11
A truck carries people past a flooded road in Thrissur, in the southern Indian state of Kerala. (AP)
Update Thousands stranded as floods submerge southern Indian state
11 / 11
People move past a flooded area in Thrissur, in the southern Indian state of Kerala. (AP)
Updated 19 August 2018
Follow

Thousands stranded as floods submerge southern Indian state

Thousands stranded as floods submerge southern Indian state
  • Thousands of people are waiting to be rescued as relentless monsoon rains cause extensive flooding
  • The central government has dispatched military units to Kerala, but state officials are pleading for additional help

TRIVANDRUM, India: Thousands of stranded people were waiting to be rescued and officials pleaded for more help from relentless monsoon floods that have partially submerged the southern Indian state of Kerala, where more than 190 have died in a little over a week.
Heavy rains hit parts of the state again Saturday morning, slowing attempts to deploy rescuers and get relief supplies to isolated areas. Many have seen no help for days and can only be reached by boat or helicopter.
More than 300,000 people have taken shelter in over 1,500 state-run relief camps, officials said. But authorities said they were being inundated with calls for assistance, local media reported.
“We are receiving multiple repetitive rescue requests,” the office of the state’s top official, Pinarayi Vijayan, said in a tweet, asking those in need to provide their exact location and nearby landmarks so rescuers can find them. Officials have called it the worst flooding in Kerala in a century, with rainfall in some areas well over double that of a typical monsoon season.
The downpours that started Aug. 8 have triggered floods and landslides and caused homes and bridges to collapse across Kerala, a picturesque state known for its quiet tropical backwaters and beautiful beaches.
Officials estimate more than 10,000 kilometers (6,200 miles) of roads have been damaged. One of the state’s major airports, in the city of Kochi, has been closed. Meteorologists expect the rains to ease up over the next few days.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi inspected the flooded landscape from a helicopter and met Saturday with the state’s top officials, promising more than $70 million in aid. While the central government has dispatched multiple military units to Kerala, state officials are pleading for additional help.


“Please ask Modi to give us helicopters, give us helicopters. ... Please, please!” state legislator Saji Cherian said on a Kerala-based TV news channel, the Indian Express newspaper reported.
Modi said 38 helicopters had been deployed for search and rescue operations in the state, which has a population of more than 33 million.
“We all pray for the safety and well-being of the people of Kerala,” he said in a tweet.
Initial storm damage estimates were nearly $2.8 billion, Vijayan said.

India’s navy said it airlifted a pregnant woman from the floods on Thursday in Kerala and she gave birth to a boy shortly after the rescue. A doctor was lowered to assess the woman before she was lifted into a helicopter, the navy said.
At least 194 people have died in the flooding and 36 more are missing, according to Kerala’s disaster management office.
More than 1,000 people have died in seven Indian states since the start of this year’s monsoon season, including more than 300 in Kerala.