Floods in Nepal force 2 million residents to flee

Army personnel help flood victims in Kapilvastu, Nepal, on July 26, 2016. (Nepalese Army/Handout via REUTERS)
Updated 29 July 2016
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Floods in Nepal force 2 million residents to flee

KATMANDU: Floods and landslides in Nepal and India have killed more than 90 people in recent days, with at least two million residents forced to flee their homes, officials said Thursday.
Nepal has been worst hit, with homes and bridges destroyed after days of torrential monsoon rains, although water levels were now slowing receding.
“Since Monday, 73 people have been killed in the floods and landslides,” Home Ministry deputy spokesman Jhanka Nath Dhakal told AFP, increasing the death toll from Tuesday after the discovery of 15 more bodies.
“Our teams are working continuously in affected areas to search and rescue. We are also providing relief to the victims.”
Images released by the army, which is involved in the operations, showed villagers waiting on rooftops to be evacuated in motorboats.
The worst-hit district was Pyuthan, 250 kilometers (150 miles) west of Katmandu, where dozens of houses have been swept away.
Scores of people die every year from flooding and landslides during the monsoon rains in Nepal and neighboring India.
The situation is particularly desperate this year because millions of Nepalis are still living in tents or makeshift huts after a devastating earthquake that killed nearly 9,000 people in 2015.
Floods have also hit India’s remote, northeastern state of Assam where 19 people have lost their lives mainly after rivers burst their banks in the last week, officials there said.
“An estimated two million people have been rendered homeless after the floods hit 3,000 villages in 21 districts,” Assam chief minister Sarbananda Sonowal told journalists during a tour of hard-hit areas on Thursday.
Thousands of those were sheltering in makeshift camps set up along highways and on higher ground, officials said.
“We are providing food, medicines and other relief materials to the flood affected victims,” Sonowal said.
Concerns were mounting for the safety of rare one-horned rhinos and other animals trying to flee Assam’s famed Kaziranga National Park, which was also flooded.
“At least a dozen animals have drowned or been killed after being hit by cars while crossing the national highway to move toward the adjoining Karbi Anglong Hills,” Assam forest minister Pramila Rani Brahma told AFP.
“The park is completely submerged and all the animals are migrating in large herds to the hills,” the minister said.
Kaziranga is home to two thirds of the world’s one-horned rhino population.


Greenland belongs to its people and has full EU support, EU’s Costa says

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Greenland belongs to its people and has full EU support, EU’s Costa says

  • “They have the full support and solidarity of the European Union,” Costa said

NICOSIA: The European Union will support Greenland and Denmark when needed and will not accept violations ​of international law no matter where they occur, EU Council President Antonio Costa said on Wednesday.
“On Greenland, allow me to be clear: Greenland belongs to its people. Nothing can be decided ‌about Denmark ‌and about Greenland ‌without ⁠Denmark, ​or without ‌Greenland,” Costa said in a speech marking the assumption by Cyprus of the rotating presidency of the EU.
“They have the full support and solidarity of the European Union,” he ⁠said.
US President Donald Trump has repeated ‌in recent days that he ‍wants to gain ‍control of Greenland, as he ‍argues the island is key for US military strategy and claims Denmark has not done enough to protect it.
Costa ​said Cyprus was taking the helm of the EU Council ⁠at a time when the international rules-based order was under attack, and urged EU member states to stand up against these developments.
“The European Union cannot accept violations of international law — whether in Cyprus, Latin America, Greenland, Ukraine or Gaza,” Costa said.
“Europe will remain a firm and ‌unwavering champion of international law and multilateralism.”