Floods that occurred mainly due to heavy rains in Nepal's catchment area continued to affect the life of over 17 lakh people in 10 districts of Bihar and have so far claimed 22 lives.
Four women were killed and two others received burn injuries after being struck by lightning in East Champaran district, a police officer said.
Rains continued to lash northern parts of the country, including New Delhi, where 14.1 mm rainfall was recorded between 8.30 AM and 5.30 PM.
Humidity levels, however, shot up in the national capital amid continuous downpour throughout the day that led to water logging in several areas triggering traffic snarls at various intersections and busy roundabouts in the city.
In Uttar Pradesh, the south-west monsoon continued to remain active as precipitation occurred in several parts of the state, where major rivers, including Ganga, were flowing at or above the danger mark at many places.
In Punjab and Haryana, the maximum temperature hovered at below normal levels in most parts of the region, while sporadic rainfall was reported from some parts.
Chandigarh recorded 30.6 degrees Celsius, two notches below normal.
Hisar drenched in 26.7 mm of rainfall, while Karnal received 2 mm of rainfall, even as Amritsar logged 1.8 mm of rainfall.
In Rajasthan, heavy to very heavy rainfall occurred in Udaipur and Ajmer divisions where Kotri and Hurda towns in Bhilwara recorded 150 mm rains and Arnod in Pratapgarh received 130 mm rains (both in 24 hours).
Jaipur, Pilani, Ajmer, Dabok, Kota and Jodhpur also recorded 29.8, 14.2, 4.9, 3, 1.8 and 1.1 (all in mm) rains respectively till evening since this morning.
In West Bengal, cloudy conditions prevailed with one or two spells of rain in isolated parts of the state as the Meteorological department forecast similar conditions in the next two days.
The coastal resort town of Digha experienced the highest rainfall of 49.1 mm since last morning.
Digha was also the warmest place in the state at 35.5 degree Celsius, while Kolkata followed closely at 34.8 degree Celsius, it said.
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