| Food Riots, Anger as Floods Swamp South Asia
INDIA: August 25, 2008
LUCKNOW, India - Flood victims demanding food and shelter beat up government
officials in India on Friday as monsoon rains spread misery among millions
of people across South Asia and forced thousands from their homes.
Rising rivers have crumpled embankments, swamped farmlands and destroyed
homes, killing almost 1,000 people since the monsoon rains began in June. In
India's eastern Bihar state, hungry villagers rioted for food, chasing and
beating up officials and local politicians with iron rods. They damaged
government vehicles.
"We do not understand their anger because the government is rushing relief
and doing everything to save them," said R.K. Singh, a senior government
official in Patna, the state capital.
Most deaths have been reported in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh, home
to 170 million people.
Indian officials on Friday reported 50 more deaths, raising the toll there
to 710 this season.
Monsoon rains have killed at least another 130 people in other parts of
India this year, while Nepal has reported some 65 deaths and Bangladesh
another 30 so far.
The monsoon is key to irrigating farmland in South Asia and driving economic
growth in a region heavily reliant on agriculture. But it leaves massive
destruction in its wake, killing hundreds of people every year.
RESCUE BY BOAT
Officials in Uttar Pradesh have moved more than 10,000 people into temporary
shelters after their houses were destroyed in floods.
Rescue workers used boats to ferry food packets, medicines and clothes to
those marooned, Balwinder Kumar, a senior government official said on
Friday. More than 7,000 flood victims were being treated for water-borne
diseases.
In neighbouring Bangladesh, more than 300,000 people have fled their homes
and thousands have been marooned as heavy rains over the past week triggered
fresh floods in southeastern Cox's Bazar district, officials said.
Several overflowing rivers in Cox's Bazar and nearby hill districts have
flooded roads and damaged crops.
In Nepal, 40,000 flood victims were housed in relief camps.
"We have collected enough food grains to feed them for two weeks but need
tents, medical kits and other relief materials urgently," said government
official Suman Ghimire. (Additional reporting by Ruma Paul in Dhaka and
Gopal Sharma in Kathmandu; Writing by Bappa Majumdar; Editing by Krittivas
Mukherjee and Paul Tait)
Story by Sharat Pradhan
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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