Mumbai Climate: Heavy Rain Batter Metropolis, Waterlogging In A number of Areas, IMD Points Purple Alert | VIDEOS | India Information

Mumbai Climate: Heavy Rain Batter Metropolis, Waterlogging In A number of Areas, IMD Points Purple Alert | VIDEOS | India Information

Heavy rains lashed Mumbai through the Saturday early hours inflicting extreme waterlogging in a number of areas. In the meantime the India Meteorological Division (IMD) has issued a ‘Purple Alert’ for Maharashtra’s capital metropolis.

Brihanmumbai Municipal Company (BMC), in a publish on X, has suggested the folks in Mumbai to keep away from going out if not crucial. 

The visuals the have surfaced present waterlogging in areas together with Milan Subway space, SCLR Bridge, Kings Circle, and Gandhi Market.  

Watch Mumbai Rains Visuals Right here: 

1- Milan Subway space

2- SCLR Bridge

Himachal Pradesh Rains

Himachal Pradesh has recorded 257 deaths because the starting of monsoon on June 20, with 133 deaths in rain-related incidents and 124 in highway accidents, in response to ANI, the Himachal Pradesh State Catastrophe Administration Authority (HPSDMA) mentioned on Friday.

The HPSDMA said that rain-triggered disasters, together with landslides, flash floods, cloudbursts, home collapses, drowning instances, and electrocution, have induced widespread lack of life and property. Mandi district reported the best variety of rain-related deaths at 26, adopted by Kangra (28), Chamba (10), and Kullu (11). 

As per ANI, highway accidents have been one other main killer this season, with Kangra (12), Kinnaur (12), Mandi (21), Shimla (15), and Chamba (20) among the many worst-affected districts. HPSDMA officers attributed many of those accidents to slippery roads, poor visibility, and automobiles skidding off rain-soaked mountain roads.

Energy provide has additionally been severely impacted, with 681 Distribution Transformers (DTRs) disrupted. The districts of Kullu and Shimla are probably the most affected, with 145 and 63 disrupted DTRs, respectively. In Kullu, the disruptions are as a result of a flash flood, defective traces, and fallen timber.

(with ANI inputs) 

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