India flood toll mounts over 550

Updated 22 June 2013
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India flood toll mounts over 550

DEHRADUN, India: Rescue workers recovered scores of bodies from the Ganges river in northern India yesterday, as the death toll from flash floods and landslides topped 200, with thousands of mainly Hindu pilgrims and tourists still stranded.
According to a local TV channel quoting state's top minister, flash floods and landslides have killed more than 550 people after torrential monsoon rains struck northern India,
"556 bodies have been noticed by the army... either floating or buried in slush," Vijay Bahuguna, chief minister of the Himalayan state of Uttarakhand told CNN-IBN.
Helicopters and thousands of soldiers have been deployed to rescue more than 50,000 people from religious sites, almost one week after floods and landslides from torrential monsoon rains struck the Himalayan state of Uttarakhand, a government minister said.More than 200 people have been killed in the disaster after raging rivers swept away houses, buildings and even entire villages, and destroyed bridges and narrow roads leading to pilgrimage towns high in the mountains, the minister said.
But the death toll is likely to rise, as flood waters recede showing the extent of the devastation and rescue workers reach more isolated areas of the state, known as the "Land of the Gods" for its revered Hindu shrines and temples.

"So far, 207 people have lost their lives. But the toll may go up as debris in many areas is yet to be cleared," said Home Minister Sushilkumar Shinde in New Delhi.
Another 17 people have been killed in the neighbouring state of Himachal Pradesh, a senior government official said. Floods and landslides from monsoon rains have also struck across the border in Nepal, leaving at least 39 people dead, the government there said.
In Uttarakhand, police said they have recovered 40 bodies floating in the Ganges near the pilgrimage town of Hardwar.
"We have recovered some 40 bodies which floated downstream and the process of identification is on," Hardwar police chief Rajeev Swaroop told AFP by phone.
The military operation, involving some 43 helicopters and more than 10,000 soldiers, was concentrating on reaching those stranded in the holy town of Badrinath after earlier finding widespread devastation in the Kedarnath temple area.
"Village after village has been buried in the debris and people who got in the way of the waters have been washed away," Uttarakhand disaster relief minister Yashpal Arya told AFP.
Rescue workers who have managed to reach those stranded are racing to cut down trees and clear vegetation to allow military helicopters to land and evacuate those most in need, a state official said.
"Thousands of tourists are waiting in the dense forests. They had all taken refuge in the jungle after hotels and other buildings collapsed," said the state's principal secretary Rakesh Sharma.
"We are trying all possible ways to rescue them. Roads are totally destroyed," he said.
Some of those stranded in mountain areas are trying to walk to safer ground, with photos showing pilgrims, aided by soldiers, using ropes and makeshift ladders to climb down cliffs and cross rivers.
Soldiers have also reached some of the villages in lower-lying areas by boat, ferrying women clutching babies, children and elderly men to safety. Video footage shows only roofs of the houses visible above the water line.
Relatives of those missing faced an anxious wait in the Uttarakhand capital Dehradun, where military helicopters and other aircraft were landing carrying some of those rescued.
Distraught relatives clutching photographs of missing family members were waiting outside Dehradun airport for news, an AFP photographer on the scene said.
Army field hospitals have also been set up throughout the state, with the elderly seen on canvas beds awaiting medical attention.
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh late on Thursday described the situation as "distressing" and announced a 170-million-dollar aid package and an online appeal for funds, asking "all citizens of India to stand with our distressed fellow countrymen" and "donate generously."


Merz says Germany exploring shared nuclear umbrella with European allies

Updated 5 sec ago
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Merz says Germany exploring shared nuclear umbrella with European allies

  • Germany is currently banned from developing a nuclear weapon
  • Britain and ‌France are the only European powers which ‍have a nuclear arsenal

BERLIN: European nations are starting to discuss ideas ​around a shared nuclear umbrella to complement existing security arrangements with the US, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said, amid growing talk in Germany of developing its own nuclear defenses.
Merz, speaking at a time of increased transatlantic tensions as US President Donald Trump upends traditional alliances, said the talks were only at an initial stage and no decision was imminent.
“We know that we have ‌to reach ‌a number of strategic and military policy ‌decisions, ⁠but ​at ‌the moment, the time is not ripe,” he told reporters on Thursday.
Germany is currently banned from developing a nuclear weapon of its own under the so-called Four Plus Two agreement that opened the way for the country’s reunification in 1990 as well as under a landmark nuclear non-proliferation treaty that Germany signed in 1969.
Merz said Germany’s ⁠treaty obligations did not prevent it from discussing joint solutions with partners, including Britain and ‌France, the only European powers which ‍have a nuclear arsenal.
“These talks are ‍taking place. They are also not in conflict with nuclear-sharing ‍with the United States of America,” he said.
European nations have long relied heavily on the United States, including its large nuclear arsenal, for their defense but have been increasing military spending, partly in response to sharp criticism ​from the Trump administration.
Trump has rattled Washington’s European allies with his talk of acquiring Greenland from Denmark, a ⁠NATO ally, and his threat, later rescinded, to impose tariffs on countries that stood in his way.
He has also suggested in the past that the US would not help protect countries that failed to spend enough on their own defense.
Merz’s comments were echoed by the head of the parliamentary defense committee, Thomas Roewekamp, who said Germany had the technical capacity which could be used in developing a European nuclear weapon.
“We do not have missiles or warheads, but we do have a significant technological advantage that we could contribute ‌to a joint European initiative,” Roewekamp, from Merz’s center-right Christian Democratic Union party, told Germany’s Welt TV.