INDIA STORM TOLL OF DEATH AND DEVASTATION RISES
The storm flattened homes and toppled electricity pylons in Rajasthan |
The death toll from freak
storms that hit India climbed above 140 on Friday as people told how they had
no time to escape fierce winds which tore down homes, walls and trees.
Many families in the
worst hit states of Uttar Pradesh and Rajasthan spent the night fearing new
chaos and the interior ministry warned of possible thunderstorms in the region
on Friday.
Victims told how 130
kilometre (80 mile) an hour winds carrying choking sand hit so quickly late
Wednesday that they had no time to reach safety from falling walls.
Twenty-four-year-old Sunil Kumar was killed when the ceiling collapsed in fierce winds in Kheragarh on the outskirts of Agra |
The dust storms
claimed 121 lives in Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan and nearby Uttarakhand and Punjab
states, according to latest official tolls.
Separately 21 people
were killed by lightning in two southern states.
Authorities in Uttar
Pradesh, where 76 died, and Rajasthan, where the storms claimed 39 lives,
battled to restore power, clear roads and help people who lost houses.
Uttar Pradesh chief
minister Yogi Adityanath cut short an election campaigning trip in Karnataka
state to return to visit storm-hit areas where residents remain fearful.
"We couldn't
sleep and were worried if the storm hits again. We took precautions and secured
everything but nothing can stand up to nature's fury," 40-year-old Agra
resident Munna Lal Jha told .
Agra district was
one of the worst hit areas with at least 43 people killed, according to the
state disaster management authority.
Twenty-four of them
were killed in the small town of Kheragarh, near Agra. Many people in the
region live in mud-wall homes that would have barely resisted the ferocious
winds.
Four children from
the same family were killed when a wall collapsed on them in Kheragarh.
LEFT TO MOURN
Damaged houses lined
the town's dusty roads. Heaps of stones and bricks lay where dozens of homes
were destroyed by the gale-force winds.
Villagers salvaged
belongings from under the debris or fixed broken windows and doors blown away
in the storm.
SOME WERE ONLY LEFT TO MOURN
Ram Bhorosi told how
his son and a nephew died when their house caved in as they welcomed people who
had attended his daughter's wedding.
"We had guests
at home and my son went inside the room to get a bed when the storm
struck," he said.
"A big stone
crushed his head after the roof collapsed. His cousin was also caught under the
crumbling roof. Half a dozen men helped us to clear the rubble to take out
bodies. They didn't get time to raise the alarm, it was so sudden."
Relatives mourn 24-year-old Sunil Kumar who was among 24 killed in the small town of Kheragarh on the outskirts of Agra |
In nearby Burera
village, Anil Kumar told of his narrow escape when their house fell.
"We were
sitting outside when the winds suddenly started raging. Four of us were crushed
under the debris after the wall fell. My grandfather died but the others
survived with injuries."
At Bharatpur in
Rajasthan, another of the worst-hit towns, a college gate pillar toppled
killing three young men, all 18, who had just been accepted as police
constables or soldiers, media reported.
The winds in
Rajasthan raged at more than 100 kph, destroying houses and uprooting trees.
Nearly 13,000 electricity pylons were damaged, snapping power supply to scores
of localities and stranding many electric-run trains.
The India
Meteorological Department has warned there are likely to be more storms over a
wider area until Tuesday.
Storms and lightning
strikes kill many people every year in India but this was one of the most
severe series of storms in recent decades.
The head of the
Telangana state disaster management department, R V Chandravadan, said volatile
weather would also continue in the southern region.
Seven people were
killed Thursday in lightning strikes and strong winds. "We have similar
weather warnings for next two days," Chandravadan told .
Another 14 people
were killed in Andhra Pradesh, which was hit by more than 41,000 lightning
strikes late Tuesday.
SOURCE: AFP
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