The rains, the heaviest in the country in over a quarter century, have pounded Sri Lanka since last weekend, triggering huge landslides that have buried some victims in up to 50 feet of mud.
Sri Lankan army and other rescuers pulled out 15 more bodies in the last 24 hours in the worst-hit district of Kegalle, about 100 kilometres from here.
Around 3,40,000 people have been displaced across the country in the floods and landslides, said Pradeep Kodippili, spokesman of the Disaster Management Centre.
The death toll is likely to go up as rescue teams reach some of the worst-hit areas, authorities said.
The national Disaster Management Centre (DMC) said that 21 of Sri Lanka's 25 districts have been badly affected due to the floods and landslide.
The military said the search for the missing persons is on in Aranayake where over 40 bodies have been pulled out from the debris.
Meanwhile, floodwaters were receding in the capital Colombo and in the Western province's Kelaniya and Kaduwela areas.
Sri Lankan authorities are now bracing to meet the mounting challenge of preventing outbreak of diseases as floodwaters are being contaminated with garbage and raw sewage.
"There is a real danger of diarrhoea and skin diseases spreading among the flood victims," Colombo Municipal Council medical chief Ruwan Wijayamuni said.
International aid poured in Sri Lanka, bringing help to lakhs of people driven from their homes by heavy rains and deadly landslides.
An Indian Air Force plane and two naval ships carrying emergency supplies arrived in Colombo yesterday.
Sri Lanka's military is airdropping food and water to affected areas as rescue operations continue, authorities said.
The UN has pledged to support the Sri Lankan government in its efforts to respond to the needs on the ground.
UN Resident Coordinator in Sri Lanka, Una McCauley, today met President Maithripala Sirisena and discussed flood emergency needs.
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