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Asia India

Mumbai rain: 4 killed, traffic hit for fourth day

Flights delayed, train services affected as monsoon slams into city



People pass in front of Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus as it rains in Mumbai.
Image Credit: PTI

Mumbai: Heavy rains flooded parts of India’s financial capital of Mumbai on Monday, as the country’s four-month summer monsoon swung into full force.

A person was electrocuted and three were killed after being struck by lightning as rain pounded the city and many parts of Maharashtra for the fourth consecutive day, disrupting normal life and hitting air, road and rail traffic, officials said on Monday.

A 30-year-old man, Mohammad Ayub Kazi, was electrocuted inside his home in Shivajinagar, Govandi suburb in north-east Mumbai. He was rushed to the Rajawadi Hospital where he was declared dead.

Three others, including a woman, were killed and two injured after being struck by lightning as they took shelter from heavy rain in a shed in Solapur on Monday afternoon.

“The five victims were waiting for the rains to subside in a shed near the Mandrup village when suddenly lighting struck them. The three killed are Parvati M. Kore, 55; Chatursingh J. Rajpu, 41; and Sanket D. Chormule, 17. The other two have been rushed to the district hospital,” Mandrup police official Baburao Rathod said.

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Overnight, heavy spells of rain inundated at least 137 spots all over Mumbai, including Dadar, Sion, Matunga, Parel, Wadala, Mahim, Santacruz, Andheri, Jogeshwari, Malad and Dahisar and virtually halted all traffic movement, leading to huge snarls.

Trains on Mumbai’s rail network, a lifeline for the city’s 20 million residents, were delayed due to waterlogged tracks.

Mumbai’s streets regularly flood during the monsoon, which runs from June until September or October, and which provides India with most of its annual rainfall.

The Indian Meteorological Department (IMD) said 91 millimetres of rain fell in Mumbai in the 24 hours up to 8.30am on Monday.

In 2005, 950 millimetres of rain fell on the coastal metropolis in just 24 hours, killing more than 500 people.

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In August 2017, intense rainfall brought the commercial hub to a virtual standstill for two days and left at least 10 people dead.

Flights to and from Mumbai’s Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj International Airport were delayed by 35 minutes owing to heavy rain and low visibility, said an official.

Long-distance services on the Central Railway’s Mumbai-Pune sector were hit following the derailment of at least four wagons of a goods train between Jambrung and Thakurwadi in the Monkey Hill section of the Western Ghats early on Monday.

Several Mumbai-Pune trains were cancelled, some diverted and other long-distance trains hit at various locations en route as the Central Railway made frantic efforts to restore normalcy.

Railway tracks were flooded at locations like Sion, Matunga and Kurla, impacting the Central Railway’s suburban sector with trains running behind schedule, delaying hundreds of thousands of office-goers and students.

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On the Western Railway, material from ongoing construction work fell and broke the overhead electric wires at Marine Line, hitting services on the slow line between Churchgate-Mumbai Central at around 8am.

Restoration was taken up on a war-footing and services were restored at 11am, said a Western Railway official, while heavy rains led to cancellation of several outstation services.

Road traffic took the brunt of the heavy rain with water-logging in several areas of the city, eastern and western suburbs, though a majority of the subways escaped flooding as the BrihanMumbai Municipal Corporation activated pumps to remove water.

As students were stranded in the rain in different areas, some schools in and around central Mumbai declared a precautionary holiday.

In Palghar district, the Surya River was hovering near the danger mark, posing a risk to at least 26 villages on its banks even as relief agencies were kept on standby.

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Thane city and district were also lashed by heavy flooding several parts of the city, including housing complexes, stranding people and halting vehicular traffic.

The IMD has forecast heavy to very heavy spells in and around Mumbai on Monday, with rainy conditions likely to continue for the next four days, and temperatures at a maximum of 28 degrees Celsius and 23 degrees Celsius.

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