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India
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Floods devastate India’s breadbasket of Punjab

Fatal floods have hit farmland almost the size of London and New York City combined, where grain is grown for hundreds of millions of people

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Villagers wade through floodwater near Punjab’s Amritsar on September 8. Floods and landslides are common during the monsoon season but experts say climate change is increasing their frequency, severity and impact. Photo: AFP
Agence France-Presse

The fields are full but the paddy rice is brown and wilted, and the air thick with the stench of rotting crops and livestock - the aftermath of record monsoon rains that have devastated India’s breadbasket.

In Punjab, often dubbed the country’s granary, the damage is unprecedented: floods have swallowed farmlands almost the size of London and New York City combined.

India’s agriculture minister said in a recent visit to the state that “the crops have been destroyed and ruined”, and Punjab’s chief minister called the deluge “one of the worst flood disasters in decades”.

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Old-timers agree.

“The last time we saw such an all-consuming flood was in 1988,” said 70-year-old Balkar Singh in the village of Shehzada, 30km (19 miles) north of the holy Sikh city of Amritsar.

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The gushing waters have reduced Singh’s paddy field to marshland and opened ominous cracks in the walls of his house.

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