In Uttarakhand's Pithoragarh district, two separate incidents of cloudbursts claimed lives of six persons while ten, including six army personnel, went missing.
The flood situation in Assam turned very critical as 32 lakh people in 25 districts were affected and three more persons lost their lives taking the toll in the second wave of deluge in the state to 18.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi spoke to the chief ministers of Bihar (Nitish Kumar) and Assam (Sarbananda Sonowal) and assured them of all support from the Centre to mitigate the situation.
An estimated 65.37 lakh people in 12 districts of Bihar have been affected by floods, with Nitish, who conducted an aerial survey of flood-hit areas, saying that Araria was the worst-hit district.
Twenty people have died in Araria, six in Sitamarhi, five in Kisanganj, three each in East Champaran, West Champaran and Darbhanga districts and one person in Madhubani, an official said.
Flood waters have engulfed areas in Kisanganj, three blocks of Purnea and one block of Katihar damaging roads.
The chief minister said heavy rains in Nepal and Bihar in last three days have led to the situation and the state government is carrying out relief operations in flooded areas on a war-footing.
He said besides the Army column (around 50 personnel) which was sent to Purnea, four teams of NDRF had arrived in Bihar yesterday and six more NDRF teams landed today to assist the state.
According to Assam State Disaster Management Authority (ASDMA) the toll in this year's flood-related incidents in the state climbed to 102. Till yesterday, 22.5 lakh people were hit by the latest wave of flood across 21 districts.
Dhubri is the worst affected with 7.79 lakh people affected by the deluge, followed by Morigaon where 3.83 lakh people have been hit.
The second wave of floods in Assam have submerged rhino habitats in Kaziranga National Park (KNP) and Pobitora Wildlife Sanctuary forcing the animals there to take shelter on highlands.
According to a KNP official over 85 per cent of the 430 sq km Kaziranga National Park, a UNESCO World Heritage site, was inundated.
Around 60,000 people in Alipurduar and Jalpaiguri districts of West Bengal have been affected by floods with all major rivers in north Bengal flowing above their danger marks.
Government sources said Phulahar river had crossed its danger level, while 20 villages, mostly under Harischandrapur Block-II and Ratua block in Malda district were inundated.
Situation was similar at Bhutni Island, while erosion was was taking place at Pardeonapur village near Farakka also in Malda district.
Eastern Railway chief public relations officer R Mahapatra told PTI that a number of trains originating in the state were today cancelled as water is flowing above the railway tracks in North East Frontier Railway jurisdiction.
Food shortage was looming large in the district following disruption in surface communication. Intra-district road communications were also badly affected due to landslides.
In Uttarakhand, the swirling waters of Mangti Nullah, which was in spate after heavy rains, hit some shops and three Armys tents near Tawaghat in Dharchula sub division. Two bodies from thespotwhile sixArmy personnel are missing.
Rawat said relief and rescue operations have been launched on a war footing by the Army, NDRF and SDRF personnel while people living in areas along the banks of rivers and rivulets and locations prone to landslides were being evacuated to safety.
The road from Malpa to Gal and the Lamadi-Chudi road was badly affected by landslides, Pant said, adding a large number of people, including devotees, who were stranded in the Vyas Valley were being evacuated to safety by copters.
However, the national capital witnessed mainly clear skies with the maximum temperature settling at 35.8 degrees Celsius, two notches above the season's average, while the minimum was pegged at 27.4 degrees Celsius.
In Punjab and Haryana, which witnessed rains last night, maximum temperatures stayed close to normal levels with Chandigarh, the joint capital of both the states, recording a high of 35.2 degrees Celsius and gauging 0.4 mm of precipitation.
Heavy rains occurred at isolated places in Chhattisgarh while parts of Vidarbha region and Madhya Pradesh witnessing moderate rainfall, but there was no significant change in maximum and minimum temperatures.
Akola in Maharashtra's Vidarbha region recorded a maximum temperature of 34.3 degrees Celsius and Damoh in Madhya Pradesh registered the lowest minimum of 19 degrees Celsius.
Rainfall also occurred at most places in Telangana and parts of many coastal Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, coastal Karnataka and Kerala.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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