Rain fury in Assam, West Bengal claims four lives

A woman was killed in a landslide in Guwahati as the flood situation in Assam remained grim

July 21, 2016 12:00 am | Updated 07:45 am IST - NEW DELHI:

WATERWAY:A vehicle wades through a waterlogged National Highway after heavy rain at Jorabhat in Kamrup district of Assam on Wednesday. PTI Photo

WATERWAY:A vehicle wades through a waterlogged National Highway after heavy rain at Jorabhat in Kamrup district of Assam on Wednesday. PTI Photo

Heavy rain wreaked havoc in the eastern States of Assam and West Bengal with four persons dying in landslides.

The weatherman has warned of “extremely heavy” rain in Assam and Meghalaya and very heavy rain in sub-Himalayan West Bengal, Sikkim, Arunachal Pradesh, Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Uttarakhand, Konkan and Goa and Vidarbha.

Delhi, which received rain over the last three-four days, reeled under sultry conditions, with the humidity levels soaring to 88 per cent and the maximum temperature settling at 37 degrees Celsius. The minimum in the city was 28.5 degrees.

The maximum temperature in the other three metropolitan cities of Kolkata, Chennai and Mumbai settled at 32.3, 32.4 and 27 degrees Celsius respectively.

A woman was killed in a landslide in Guwahati as the flood situation in Assam remained grim. The State Disaster Management Authority has sounded an alert for Barpeta and Jorhat districts.

Manas, Noakhanda, Mora Chawlkhowa, Beki rivers are in spate in Barpeta and the Brahmaputra at Majuli in Jorhat.

About 1.41 lakh people have been hit by the current wave of floods in 213 villages in Lakhimpur, Golaghat, Morigaon, Jorhat, Dhemaji and Sivasagar districts.

Three members of a family were killed in a landslide triggered by heavy rain at Fincheytaar in Darjeeling Hills.

Heavy rains pounded sub-Himalayan West Bengal but gave a miss to the rest of the State. IMD said the region will witness heavy downpour over the next four days.

Jalpaiguri was the wettest place in the State, gauging 67 mm of rainfall, Darjeeling got 59.8 mm of precipitation and Cooch Behar 12.8 mm.

Parts of Bihar got light rain, leading to a drop in the maximum temperature. The MeT department said the southwest monsoon is active over the region and the State will receive more rain in the coming days. -- PTI

About 1.41 lakh people hit by the floods in 213 villages in six major districts, including Lakhimpur and Jorhat

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