At least 18 people were killed and nearly 100 missing yesterday after heavy rains caused a Himalayan glacial lake in northeast India to burst its banks, the worst such disaster in the region in more than 50 years.
Lhonak Lake in Sikkim state overflowed on Wednesday, causing major flooding that authorities said had impacted the lives of 22,000 people. It is the latest deadly weather event in South Asia’s mountains being blamed on climate change.
The weather department said Sikkim received 101mm of rain in the first five days of October, more than double normal levels, unleashing floods worse than one in October 1968 in which an estimated 1,000 people were killed. The department has predicted heavy rain over the next three days in parts of Sikkim and neighbouring states.
The latest flooding was exacerbated by water released from state-run NHPC’s Teesta V dam, local officials said. Four of the dam’s gates had been washed away and it was not clear why they had not been opened in time, a government source said.
As of yesterday evening, 98 people were missing, 17 of whom were army personnel, state chief secretary V B Pathak said.
Fourteen bridges had been washed away, hampering rescue operations already affected by heavy rainfall. Pathak said 18 relief camps had been opened yesterday where food and medical assistance was being provided.
Authorities in neighbouring Bangladesh were on alert. A state-run water development board official warned that five districts in the northern part of the country could be inundated with a rise in the level of the Teesta river, which enters Bangladesh downstream of Sikkim.
Prabhakar Rai, director of Sikkim’s State Disaster Management Authority, said bad weather was hampering rescue operations and described the situation as “slightly grim”.
“Due to bad weather conditions we cannot have air service towards the northern part of the state,” Rai said.
“Roads have been damaged at various places so communication is a big problem. Telephone communication disruption is also a problem in the upper reaches,” he said. Silt that had collected in houses along the river bed was also slowing rescue work. About 2,500 tourists are stuck in and around Chungthang town in Mangan district, about 100km north of the state capital Gangtok, but they are in safe places and will be evacuated by air when the weather improves, Rai said. An advisory from the state tourism department asked visitors planning trips to the scenic state to postpone travel and said those stuck in Mangan district would be evacuated from today subject to weather.
“All tourists stranded at Lachung and Lachen areas are safe and nothing adverse has so far been reported,” the advisory said, referring to the two rivers that join to form the Teesta in Chungthang. Video footage from the ANI news agency showed flood waters surging into built-up areas where several houses collapsed. Army bases and other facilities were damaged and vehicles submerged. Photos showed earth movers and rescue workers shovelling silt and mud to dig out military vehicles buried by the riverside. Satellite imagery showed that nearly two-third of the lake seems to have been drained. Sikkim, a small state of about 650,000 people which is wedged in the mountains between Nepal, Bhutan and China, was cut off from Siliguri in the neighbouring state of West Bengal as the main highway had collapsed.