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Heavy flooding kills over 300 in eastern and central India

An Indian pedestrian walks through a flooded street at Dashashwamedh Ghat in Varanasi on August 23, 2016. (AFP)

Over 300 people have died in eastern and central India as severe flooding is destroying villages, crops, and roads.

According to government officials on Tuesday, the floods, the result of heavy monsoon rains, have affected over six million people, many of whom have relocated to relief camps in the states of Madhya Pradesh, Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan and Uttarakhand.  

India's National Disaster Response Forces (NDRF) has been deployed to the flood-hit states and has rescued over 33,000 people stranded in remote villages.

Indian pedestrians walk through a flooded street at Dashashwamedh Ghat in Varanasi on August 23, 2016. (AFP)

“The flood waters have engulfed low-lying areas, homes and fields of crops," said an official from Bihar, where 120 people died.

"We have shifted people to higher ground and they are being provided with cooked rice, clean drinking water, polythene sheets," he added.

Schools were shut in Uttar Pradesh, where 43 people were killed as both the water levels in Ganges and Yamuna rivers continue to rise.

Members of India's National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) ride in an inflatable boat on a flooded street at Dashashwamedh Ghat in Varanasi on August 23, 2016. (AFP)

Some 70 people also died in Madhya Pradesh since the beginning of the floods, and over 40,000 homes have been rendered inhabitable.

Floods triggered by heavy rains during the monsoon seasons claim scores of lives every year in India.

Earlier this month, flood claimed the lives of almost 100 people in the northern regions. Heavy downpours also affected the central state of Madhya Pradesh, killing at least 15 people.


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