Monsoon Mayhem: Mumbai Floods Claim Lives and Paralyze the City

Torrential rains hit Mumbai, causing severe floods, killing at least four people, and disrupting city life. The heavy downpour on Wednesday evening paralyzed traffic and delayed trains. Prime Minister Narendra Modi cancelled a trip due to a red alert. Schools were closed, and more rain is expected.


Devdiscourse News Desk | Updated: 26-09-2024 14:57 IST | Created: 26-09-2024 13:35 IST
Monsoon Mayhem: Mumbai Floods Claim Lives and Paralyze the City
Represtative Image Image Credit: ANI

Torrential rain lashed India's financial capital Mumbai, triggering floods and killing at least four people as well as paralysing the city and forcing schools to close on Thursday before easing slightly in the afternoon. Some parts of Mumbai recorded around 275 mm (11 inches) of rain on Wednesday evening, which crippled road traffic and delayed the trains millions of city residents use every day.

Four people died from rain-related incidents, officials said. Prime Minister Narendra Modi cancelled a trip to the city of Pune, nearly 200 kms, (124 miles) from Mumbai, after authorities declared a red alert due to the rain.

With more rain expected in Mumbai as well, authorities also issued a citywide red alert and urged residents to stay home. Schools and colleges were shut and fishermen were asked to stay away onshore until Friday. Drone footage posted on social media showed snarled highways clogged with cars - some with their drivers still inside, others abandoned by frustrated drivers. Hundreds of thousands of commuters spent hours on the road.

India's monsoon rains started retreating from the northwest of the country earlier this week, nearly a week later than normal, the state-run India Meteorological Department (IMD) said in a statement. The monsoon generally begins in June and starts to retreat by Sept. 17 but the rains continued this year, which has helped to replenish reservoirs but damaged the crop harvest in some states.

Heavy rain was also forecast for some parts of the southern state of Telengana on Thursday, the weather office said. In neighbouring Bangladesh, rain brought relief after a week of intense heat, but it also flooded streets, worsening the already bad traffic in the capital Dhaka and other parts of the country.

(With inputs from agencies.)

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