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SHAKE AND BLOW
India-Pakistan flood disaster prompts frantic rescue bid
by Staff Writers
Srinagar, India (AFP) Sept 08, 2014


Prayers, anxious wait for rescue in India's flooded Srinagar
Srinagar, India (AFP) Sept 07, 2014 - Huddled with his elderly landlords on the top floor of his inundated home in India's Srinagar, Parvaiz Bukhari can see neighbours making a desperate response to devastating floods.

"From my window I can see they all have their arms in the air, praying," Bukhari said in Srinagar, the main city of Muslim-majority Indian Kashmir.

During the night the swollen Jhelum river burst its banks, flooding large parts of the picturesque city, following days of torrential monsoon rains across the state.

Despite calls to emergency services, Bukhari and his neighbours in the city's central Rajbagh area remain trapped, with the water reaching the second of their third floors by Sunday morning.

"I've seen a couple of boats go past but nobody has stopped," said Bukhari, AFP's reporter in Srinagar, adding that the water has risen to a height of about 12 feet (3.6 metres).

"We can't go out, the water is moving too fast. I can see gas cylinders, barrels, wood debris floating past," he added.

"We will have to move to the roof but we are also worried about the building collapsing."

Hundreds of soldiers, backed by helicopters and boats, have been deployed across the northern Himalayan state in recent days, following flash floods and landslides that have submerged whole villages and left more than 110 people dead.

In neighbouring Pakistan, some 142 people have been killed in floods and landslides also triggered by heavy rains, officials said Sunday.

Across Srinagar, a city of 900,000, many moved to higher levels or evacuated on Saturday night as waters flooded homes, the army headquarters and other government buildings.

Many have pulled together to flee on foot to safety, packing into community centres and wedding halls on higher ground.

Photos showed residents wading through thigh-deep waters clutching their belongings, and huddled in army boats with blankets.

At Shri Maharaja Hari Singh, the city's oldest hospital, patients were moved to the upper floors after the waters hit.

"Those who were able to walk were helped to the upper floors by attendants, others were taken on wheelchairs in the elevator," said local businessman Fareeh Ahmed, who lives nearby.

College lecturer Aakifa Javaid, 25, said she and her neighbours decided to pack their bags and flee northern Srinagar after elders from a local mosque announced on loudspeakers that "it would be a difficult night."

"Noone slept through the night. Even at around 2:00am people were moving out of their homes just for their safety," Javaid said.

Authorities in India and Pakistan made frantic efforts Monday to pluck tens of thousands of people to safety from floods which have killed at least 350 as desperate residents huddled on rooftops.

With phone lines down and roads cut off, the full scale of the disaster in the cross-border Kashmir region and in Pakistan's Punjab province was still to emerge but video footage shot from army helicopters showed entire villages under water, with only tin roofs visible.

As Pakistan's premier toured some of the worst-hit areas, India deployed naval commandos as part of a massive relief effort.

Some of the famous shikara wooden boats, which ferry tourists across the Dal Lake in Indian Kashmir's main city of Srinagar, were pressed into service to reach isolated homes.

Divers toiled to help bring people to safety while residents on both sides could be seen waving from rooftops as vehicles and livestock were washed away by surging waters below them.

Disaster officials say at least 350 villages have been submerged on the Indian side of the de facto border in Kashmir by monsoon rains, making it the deadliest flooding there in over half a century.

Thousands of troops, police and other emergency personnel, backed by helicopters and boats, fanned out across the state to deliver relief supplies, including protein biscuits and bottles of drinking water.

Others were being fed in mass volunteer-run kitchens set up by mosques.

The home ministry said around 20,000 people had been rescued so far but the head of the army's northern command said many more remained marooned.

"For the next 48 hours, our focus remains on Srinagar and South Kashmir because there are still large numbers of people who are stranded and who are without any food and water," General D.S. Hooda told reporters.

"It's our idea to get them out as soon as possible. We will continue... until everyone is pulled out of this situation."

An Indian Navy spokesman said teams of divers were working "day and night" to rescue survivors.

- Airport cut off -

Srinagar airport was cut off from the city by heavy flooding just 700 yards outside the terminal, according to an AFP correspondent.

Delhi resident R. S. Gandhi was stuck at the airport after flying up from the capital to rescue his in-laws.

"The last time I was able to speak to them was yesterday and they had already moved up to the second floor of their building. Twelve feet of water had come into their building in just three hours," he told AFP.

"Now that I am here I don't know what to do next, how I can help or get them back to Delhi."

Communications were lost Sunday when the rain-swollen Jhelum river flooded large parts of Srinagar. Srinagar's main hospital and army barracks were among the buildings badly hit.

There was no fresh rainfall Monday and forecasters said only light drizzle was likely in the next few days. But Indian officials warned the death toll of 150 was bound to rise.

- Refuge on roofs -

In Pakistan officials said the number of dead on their side now stood at 206, with most killed in Punjab province.

Helicopters, troops and other emergency personnel have been deployed, according to Pakistan's National Disaster Management Authority.

Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif handed out compensation cheques to flood victims at Rawalakot in Pakistan-administered Kashmir.

"There is no compensation for life, but government will help the affected brothers and sisters to rebuild their homes," he said.

In the remote mountainous district of Haveli in Pakistan-administered Kashmir, landslides have caused major damage to roads and electricity supplies, leaving residents without power or drinking water for days.

Local politician Masood Rathor said there was a shortage of food and medicine in the area, with only one doctor to treat the population.

Tariq Umer, 38, a labourer, told of his desperate struggle to save his family and possessions.

"I was sleeping with my wife and three children when the floodwaters came at around midnight. I barely managed to get my family out and could not save anything from the house," he told AFP.

"My house and all my belongings have been swept away in the water and I have been left with nothing. Now I am taking my family to relatives for refuge."

Raja Moazam, deputy director of the disaster management authority, told AFP the death toll in Pakistani Kashmir now stood at 64.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi toured his country's sector of Kashmir Sunday, describing the situation as "a national-level disaster" and also offering relief assistance to Sharif.

burs-co/lm

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SHAKE AND BLOW
Deadly floods hit Indian Kashmir's Srinagar
Srinagar, India (AFP) Sept 07, 2014
Soldiers were battling Sunday to rescue thousands of people trapped in Indian Kashmir's worst flooding for half a century which has left more than 100 people dead and the main city of Srinagar under water. Some 350 villages have also been submerged since torrential monsoon rains triggered flooding across the picturesque Himalayan region of Jammu and Kashmir. Across the border in Pakistan ... read more


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