NP Rank:
Flood waters lap Taj Mahal, Food riots in eastern india
Flooding in the <?xml:namespace prefix = st1 />Mahanadi continued on wednesday causing 61 breaches in river embankments, leaving behind a trail of devastation submerging hundreds of villages. Lakhs of people were waiting for rescue and relief in the flooded zones. Thousands of people in Cuttack, Kendrapara, Jagatsinghpur and Puri districts took shelter along roadsides and river embankments under temporary polythene roofs depending purely on whatever little food was supplied by the administration. with Intermittent rains have made their shelters inhospitable creating fear of diseases.
The severe floods in the Mahanadi river system have claimed 29 lives and affected more than 37 lakh people till wednesday evening.
The death toll is likely to go up as reports come in from the interiors of the worst-affected districts of Kendrapara, Jagatsinghpur, Cuttack and Puri districts. Food packets were airdropped in some affected zones during the day. shortage of food packets creating a big problem for government .The Sun temple of Konark remained inaccessible for the third day due to the breaches on the roads.
Meanwhile , The Taj Mahal is facing the flood water in Uttar Pradesh, this monument is on the bank of river yamuna. Heavy rain in the upper catchment areas and breach of embankments is creating a challenge for authorities to protect this monument of peace and love.
"At least eight people sustained injuries after two groups of people clashed over distribution of relief," police officer Jitendra Kumar Dalai, who was injured, told Reuters by telephone from flood-hit Jagatsinghpur district.
Authorities said more than 100,000 people are still marooned and six more deaths were reported overnight, raising the death toll from floods in the eastern state to 35 in the past week.
More than 200 people have died in the past five days in India, most of them in northern Uttar Pradesh and Bihar in the east, with rising rivers bursting their banks and swamping vast areas of farmland and villages, forcing thousands from their homes.
Indian officials said they had posted policemen near the famed Taj Mahal to monitor water levels in the swollen Yamuna river.
Flood waters had reached the outer wall of the Taj compound, but posed no danger to the 17th century mausoleum built by the Mughal emperor Shah Jahan on very high ground, officials said.
"Since the monument has weathered many a storm over the centuries, I do not think the rise in the Yamuna level or its increasing current could cause any harm to the structure," said K.C. Yadav, a police officer.
The flooding in the Yamuna, which also flows close to New Delhi, was caused by the release of water from two barrages following heavy rains upstream.
The Taj Mahal, one of the seven wonders of modern world, is already under threat from industrial pollution which is turning its white marble a pale yellow
Crowd Power
-
Mahatma4711
Köln, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Germany -
David Ayliffe
Kingswinford, -
Jordan Yerman
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada -
Amitjha
new delhi, India








Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (14)
at 23:47 on September 24th, 2008
The irony here is that many around the world may be more concerned for the safety of the Taj Mahal than the people endangered by these floods.
at 23:54 on September 24th, 2008
hi Rene,
thanks for such a nice comment. sorry for this kind of headline, atleast taj will attract some reading.last day i flased a story of killing in somalia..............but as usual, what can anybody expect from any news from black continent other then blackkkkkk.
at 04:59 on September 25th, 2008
Do you mean the dark continent? Which is what Africa used to be called, waaaay back in the day. Just so you know this post has racist overtones, I'm sure you didn't mean it that way but you might want to be aware of how a post like this looks.
at 04:10 on September 25th, 2008
Amitjha, I like this story. It's good stuff.
at 04:22 on September 25th, 2008
VERY GUD STUFF
DO IT REGULARLY....
at 04:32 on September 25th, 2008
Amitjha, I like this story. It's good stuff. Excellent post: the plight of small farmers in drought ridden/flooded India is appalling. But the World Isnt Listening!
at 04:48 on September 25th, 2008
The juxtaposition of this tragic story, next to a detailed dissection of Episode 11 of America's Next Top Model that takes head-on the topic of gaps in teeth, shows how "we" live in parallel worlds that have no intersection but just happen to occupy the same physical space.
at 05:07 on September 25th, 2008
nice comment mr Rogger,
the tragedy of our observation is that we wear green glass and visit desert and say that this desert is green, we forget the exitence og green glass, because we want to see what we like.if i say i am the world and world is me, then whole problem is solved.
at 04:50 on September 25th, 2008
Amitjha, I like this story. It's good stuff. those are large numbers of people affected and killed. are the hundred thousand marooned people going to be rescued, i wonder.
at 04:54 on September 25th, 2008
Amitjha, I like this story. It's good stuff.
at 05:57 on September 25th, 2008
Amitjha, I like this story. It's good stuff. Is it all related to the Monsoons?
at 05:57 on September 25th, 2008
Amitjha, I like this story. It's good stuff.
at 06:00 on September 25th, 2008
Amitjha, I like this story. It's good stuff.
at 10:15 on September 25th, 2008
These are children of flood victims evacuated in an relief camp in Bhanmanki of the Purnea district of Bihar. The children left to play wander around aimlessly waiting for the flood waters to recede.
Prashanth Vishwanathan has contributed a photo to this story.