Heavy rains drown Mumbai, national disaster teams called in
The Regional Meteorological Centre, Mumbai, on Tuesday predicted intermittent rain with heavy to very heavy rain fall in parts of the city.
Mumbai: Heavy rainfall drowned Mumbai and its nearby areas on Tuesday and it looked like there was little respite in sight with the Met department predicting more showers over the next 24 hours.
It has been raining incessantly since Monday, preceded by moderate to heavy showers over the weekend. Officials believe this is the heaviest and longest bout of rain since July 26, 2005 when the city was ravaged by floods.
See Gallery: Maximum city in turmoil as heavy rains continue
Civic authorities asked people to keep indoors but it was too late for most, who waded through dirty brown waters to offices. At some places, vehicles could barely be seen above water. There were also the only-too-familiar sites of thick branches nestling on shattered windshields or dented car tops.
Traffic crawled on major arterial roads the whole day while waterlogging was reported from low-lying areas, some right at the heart of the city.
#Maharashtra Heavy rain lashes #Mumbai; Visuals from Bandra, severe water-logging in the area pic.twitter.com/XPZU5VRaQe
— ANI (@ANI) August 29, 2017
The Regional Meteorological Centre, Mumbai, on Tuesday predicted intermittent rain with heavy to very heavy showers in parts of the city and “extremely heavy” rainfall at “one or two places in the city and suburbs”.
Three teams of the National Disaster Response Force (NDRF), stationed in Mumbai, have been put on alert and two additional teams have been moved from Pune to Mumbai, according to ANI.
The Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) assured the situation was under control and advised citizens to step out only if necessary.
“The metropolis has received heavy rainfall since last night. Between 8.30 am and 12 pm today, the city received 85 mm rainfall," Sudhir Naik, Deputy Municipal Commissioner, told PTI.
"Step out of home only if it is too important because waterlogging has been reported from several parts of the city," he said.
Naik, however, added things were well under control and senior civic officials were keeping a close watch on the situation.
The civic body's control room monitored the situation the whole day. It was also told that water had entered the King Edward Memorial Hospital.
Been sitting in the cab for over 5 hours now. Eastern express highway jammed. #MumbaiRains pic.twitter.com/xfV6oh7gZq
— Moinak Pal (@matt1791) August 29, 2017
An officer at the BMC's Disaster Management Cell said, "There have been reports of waterlogging in Dadar, Andheri, Worli, Kurla and Sakinaka, among other areas. Despite the heavy downpour, no untoward incident has been reported so far.”
To make matters worse, a high tide of 3.32 meters was also headed the city's way early Tuesday evening. Actor-turned-entrepreneur Gul Panag tweeted, "Brace yourself Mumbai. Heavy rain coming. Plan ahead. Stay safe."
Read: Amid torrential rains in Mumbai, BMC cancels leaves of all its employees
Mumbai's transport lifeline, the local trains, were running late on all three city routes. Services were also stopped in some areas due to flooded tracks. Some trains stood for hours in between stations because of the rains. People were seen hopping off coaches and walking to safety.
On Tuesday morning, Nagpur-Mumbai Duronto Express derailed in Maharashtra's Asangaon, near Mumbai. The railway authorities said initial inputs suggested the train went off tracks due to a major landslide.
Floods have killed more than 1,000 people in India, Nepal and Bangladesh in recent weeks and forced millions from their homes in the region's worst monsoon disaster in recent years.