Death
tolls in the widespread flooding that has left parts of
India and Bangladesh inundated rose to more than 700 people
on Tuesday. The victims have all died since September 18
when late monsoon rains caused rivers to burst their banks
and dams to overflow. Much of the border area between the
two countries has been left beneath 10 feet (three metres)
of floodwater.
At least 15 million people have been displaced by the flooding.
Thousands of residents in the densely populated city of
Calcutta began evacuating to higher ground on Tuesday following
warnings that the floods, combined with predicted high tides,
could submerge low-lying areas by midnight. The warning
came as the Ganges River and other rivers in West Bengal
and Bangladesh continued to rise and burst their banks.
Relief
officials reported that the main road between Calcutta
and the worst-hit district of Murshidabad had become completely
submerged about 50 miles (80 km) from Calcutta. Damage
from the floods has left vast areas of West Bengal and
Bihar without power as electric lines have broken and
transformers have become waterlogged.
Grant
Cassidy, a relief worker for World Vision, reported, "People
are living on rooftops and climbing into trees. All sorts
of . . . small makeshift craft are bringing people in.
There are not enough boats. The national highway is just
an island. The military is doing its operations from there."
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