A woman walks through a flooded area following rains, at Kampur, in Nagaon district, Assam Photo | PTI
Nation

Assam's flood situation remains grim, over four lakh affected

The death toll in this year's floods, landslides and storms has reached 36. More than 100 relief camps have been opened, with over 14,000 affected people taking shelter.

PTI

GUWAHATI: The flood situation in Assam remained grim on Friday with over four lakh people reeling under the deluge in several districts, officials said.

Several major rivers, including Kopili, Barak and Kushiyara, were flowing above the danger level as per reports till Thursday evening.

Over four lakh people in 19 districts including Bajali, Baksa, Barpeta, Biswanath, Cachar, Darrang, Goalpara, Hailakandi, Hojai, Kamrup, Karimganj, Kokrajhar, Lakhimpur, Nagaon, Nalbari, Sonitpur, South Salmara, Tamulpur and Udalguri continued to reel under floodwater, the officials added.

The state has been receiving incessant rainfall over the past few days, leading to the deluge. Light to moderate rain is likely to occur in most parts of Assam. Thunderstorms and lightning, along with downpours have also been forecasted in isolated places in the state for the next couple of days.

The officials further said that Karimganj was the worst hit by the flood with over 2.5 lakh people affected, followed by Darrang and Tamulpur. The death toll in this year's floods, landslides and storms has reached 36.More than 100 relief camps have been opened, with over 14,000 affected people taking shelter.Several embankments, roads and bridges have been damaged by floodwater in the affected districts.

MM Naravane backs publisher, says memoir not yet published

Three days before polls, Hindu trader hacked to death in Bangladesh

Govt notifies new rules, makes AI-generated sexual abuse images and other illegal content punishable

Budget Session LIVE: Opposition submits notice for resolution to remove Speaker; LS debates Budget

Trump's immigration chiefs are set to testify in Congress following protester deaths

SCROLL FOR NEXT