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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Pace of Bombay cleanup raises ire


People wade through flood water in Dudhgaon, about 350 miles southwest of Bombay, India, on Saturday. The discovery of more bodies pushed the death toll from monsoon flooding in India to 853 on Saturday. 
 (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Ramola Talwar Badam Associated Press

BOMBAY, India – Hundreds of angry demonstrators blocked traffic for hours Saturday to demand restoration of drinking water and electricity and clearing of rotting animal carcasses after this week’s monsoon rains in western India. Officials said the death toll could reach 1,000.

Rescuers found more than 100 bodies in the debris of collapsed homes Saturday, bringing the official death toll from the devastating floods in Bombay and the surrounding Maharashtra state to 853. They fear more bodies are buried in remote areas, and the death toll could increase by 100 to 150, said Chief Secretary Prem Kumar, the state’s top bureaucrat.

Kumar said rescue work was mostly over and officials were focusing on relief.

Newspapers warned of the threat of waterborne diseases, and hospitals and health centers geared up to distribute free medicines to check any outbreak.

Rain showers began intermittently hitting Bombay and its outlying areas again Saturday, though with far less force than earlier in the week.

Hundreds of residents in five Bombay districts raised anti-government slogans and blocked traffic for more than five hours to demand an immediate cleanup of the city. While some shielded themselves from rain with plastic shields, others got drenched as they protested outside civic offices.

“For so many days we have been lifting the bodies of the dead and now we are clearing animals from the roads. Is this our work?” asked a furious Hafeez Irani, his face covered with a handkerchief against the stench.

“The drains are choked. We still have no electricity,” said Irani, a construction worker. “We have these handkerchiefs on all the time.”

Civic leaders pleaded for patience. They claimed equipment and workers to clear roads and drains were being called in from other areas hit by landslides.

The recovery of 104 bodies in four mudslide-ravaged villages in Raigad district and two Bombay suburbs raised the official death toll to 853 on Saturday, said Kumar.

Most of the deaths were caused by landslides and flooding after Tuesday’s torrential rains cut off the state from the rest of the country. Rainfall was as much as 37 inches in parts of Bombay.