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A man walks along a waterlogged street during a heavy monsoon rainfall in Chennai, India on November 11. Photo: AFP

Monsoon rains in southern India and Sri Lanka kill at least 41, authorities say

  • Thousands of people have been moved to safety but ‘worst is over’
  • Chennai, auto-capital city, using pumps to drain waist-deep water
India

Heavy rain across southern India and Sri Lanka have killed at least 41 people, authorities said on Thursday, with weather forecasters expecting the downpours to ease in the next few days as stricken communities pumped out the deluge.

The Indian Meteorological Department forecast light to moderate rain in most affected areas, with occasional flooding of some roads and low-lying areas.

A Sri Lankan woman carries a child as she wades through a flooded street in Sri Lanka on November 10. Photo: AP

Counterparts in neighbouring Sri Lanka said rain there was expected to ease from Thursday as the low pressure that brought the bad weather moved away.

“The worst is over and occasional rains will happen,” said Pradeep John, an amateur forecaster who is widely followed in Tamil Nadu, India’s worst-affected state. “Today rains will be on and off, with large breaks and nothing alarming.”

Volunteers distribute food to residents of a waterlogged neighbourhood during a heavy monsoon rainfall in Chennai, India on November 11. Photo: AFP

The rains have killed 25 people in the island nation of Sri Lanka, most of whom drowned, while landslides injured five, officials said.

Sixteen people were killed in India’s Tamil Nadu state, said state disaster management minister KKSSR Ramachandran.

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Flash floods and landslide in India kill at least 25 people in southwestern state of Kerala

Flash floods and landslide in India kill at least 25 people in southwestern state of Kerala

Many parts of the state capital Chennai, India’s auto manufacturing centre, were waterlogged and government officials used pumps to drain some communities that had been stranded waist deep.

Thousands of people in low lying areas were moved to safety, officials said.

Many schools and colleges in Tamil Nadu remained closed while some train services were still suspended.

India’s northeast monsoon usually runs from October to December, bringing heavy rain, particularly to the south.

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