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Floods ravage eastern India as coronavirus infections surge

by Reuters
Thursday, 16 July 2020 07:57 GMT

Villagers row a makeshift raft through a flooded field to reach a safer place at the flood-affected Mayong village in Morigaon district, in the northeastern state of Assam, India, June 29, 2020. REUTERS/Anuwar Hazarika

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Monsoon floods force more than a million people into makeshift shelters despite the risk of coronavirus

GUWAHATI, India, July 16 (Reuters) - Monsoon floods have swamped large parts of India's densely populated eastern states, forcing more than a million people into makeshift shelters despite the risk of coronavirus, senior officials said on Thursday.

Torrential annual rains are crucial for agriculture in South Asia, but this year India is also grappling with the virus, which has infected 968,875 people and killed 24,915, health authorities say.

The floods have killed at least 10 people and injured more than 70 in the states of Assam, Bihar and Jharkhand, where heavy rain has submerged thousands of villages in the past 24 hours as authorities battle to ensure social distancing in relief camps.

"We have floods taking a deadly turn and simultaneously we are fighting the pandemic spreading its tentacles everywhere," Assam's health minister, Hemant Biswa Sarma, told Reuters.

At a time when world attention is focused on the crisis in the United States and South America, a human tragedy is swiftly unfolding in South Asia, said John Fleming of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies.

"COVID-19 is spreading at an alarming rate in South Asia, home to a quarter of humanity," said Fleming, the group's head of health in the Asia-Pacific region, referring to the contagious respiratory disease.

"India alone is nearing 1 million infections in coming days."

Officials said that swathes of Assam's Kaziranga National Park had been submerged with at least 50 wild animals dead, while some rhinos had strayed into villages, adding to the hazards relief and rescue workers face.

The UNESCO World Heritage site is home to two-thirds of the world's population of the one-horned rhinoceros.

(Interactive graphic tracking global spread of coronavirus: open https://tmsnrt.rs/3aIRuz7 in an external browser.)

(Reporting by Zarir Hussain in Guwahati, Saurabh Sharma in Lucknow and Stephanie Nebehay in Geneva; Writing by Rupam Jain; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)

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