Over 1,600 people affected due to floods in Kanchanpur
Floods triggered by incessant rainfall have submerged some settlements in Kanchanpur.
According to the District Police Office, Kanchanpur, most of the areas have been affected by the floods. Three settlements of Dodhara Chandani Municipality-10 have been inundated after the Mahakali and Jogbuda rivers entered the settlements.
Kutiyakabhar of Jogbuda and Shanti Tole and Lisani Tole of Wari have been inundated. Similarly, Bhimdutta Municipality, Bedkot, Shuklaphanta, Krishnapur Municipality and most of the settlements in the southern region of Kanchanpur have been flooded.
Spokesperson at the District Police Office, Deputy Superintendent of Police Umesh Joshi, said 1,622 people, who were affected by the floods across the district, have been rescued and shifted to safer places.
Floods wreak havoc in Kailali
Normal life has been affected in Kailali due to floods triggered by incessant rainfall.
Some families have been displaced after floods entered the settlement in Bhajani of Kailali on Sunday night. The municipality and the locals have jointly shifted the people of the risky areas to postal roads and high-placed buildings throughout the night.
Krishna Dhamala, a local, said some families in Bhajani have left the settlement overnight and moved to the streets. The people living in the settlement sat on the postal road with children and livestock at night due to the rise in water level in rivers and rivulets.
The floods inundated almost all the wards of Bhajani. All the houses in ward-8 have been inundated. "Hundreds of families have moved to the streets and high-rise houses with their belongings after the settlements were waterlogged following incessant rains", he said. The southern and eastern parts of Kailali have been inundated due to the floods.
The settlements of Tikapur, Bhajani, Janaki and Joshipur of Kailali near the rivers and rivulets have been inundated due to the rise in water level in the River Chure and the Karnali River. Some families have been displaced in Tikapur Municipality.
Disaster Management Section Chief of Tikapur Nirmala Chaudhary said that 65 houses of Parseni, Bhartapur and Bhagwanpur of ward-6 have been inundated due to the flood in Patharaya River.
Ward 2, 5, 7 and 8 of Tikapur are at risk of inundation as the water level in the Karnali River increases. Similarly, Joshipur rural municipality has also been inundated due to incessant rain.
Chief of the disaster management section of Joshipur Rural Municipality, Sita Singh said water from the Kada river has entered Bhittariya and inundated it.
Most of Janaki's wards have been inundated and some families have been displaced.
Disaster management section chief Netra Prasad Jaisi said many settlements in ward 4 and 7 have been inundated. "There are 11 families living in Girdharpur of ward 4. There are 15 families living in Farela of ward 7," Jaisi said.
Dozens of settlements in Janaki are waterlogged. The municipalities in the area have intensified their work such as cleaning drains after the floods ran through the settlements. They have been engaged in the work of opening the jammed drains and draining out water in the submerged areas.
Information Officer at the District Administration Office, Shivaraj Joshi, shared that various places in the district have been inundated due to rain so the teams are being mobilized to minimize the damage.
14 killed in recent floods and landslides
A total of 14 people lost their lives to disasters triggered by incessant monsoon rain at different parts of the country since Friday night.
Others three have gone missing in the landslides, flooding, and inundations. According to Nepal Poice spokesperson and Deputy Inspector General of Police, Dan Bahadur Karki, the number of injuries in such incidents is 18.
Of the 14 casualties, one has been reported in Kathmandu, three in Syangja, two in Parbat, one in Udayapur, two in Kavrepalanchowk, one in Palpa, three in Tanahun and one in Dang.
Manoj BK from Lakhan Thapa Rural Municipality-6 in Gorkha was killed in a landslide in Nagarjun Municipality-3, Kathmandu.
Others killed due to landslides include Raj Rai from Rautamai Rural Municipality-5 in Udayapur, and Jalamaya Rujal Magar, and Setimaya Rujal from Roshi Rural Municipality-11 in Kavrepalanchowk.
Further casualties from landslides include Hira Nepal, Anisha Bastola, and Shyam Bhandari from Shuklagandaki Municipality-7 in Tanahun, and Guweshori Sharma Marasini, Madhav Sharma and Harimaya Sharma from Biruwa Rural Municipality-6 in Syangja, according to the police.
According to Police Headquarters, Naxal, Jhalak Prasad Sharma and Tulsi Prasad Sharma of Phalebas Municipality-1 Karkineta in Parbat, Rima Saraha Ranamgar of Mathagadhi Rural Municipality-6 in Palpa and Maniam Chaudhary of Bagrapur in Lamahi Municipality-8 of Dang were killed in the landslide.
Similarly, Jangmu Sherpa of Dolakha Gaurishankar Rural Municipality-9, Rajkumar Yadav of Rajpur Rural Municipality-2, Dang and Khem Kumari Mall of Syangja Bhirkot Municipality-5 Jyamire are among those who disappeared in flooding and landslide incidents.
Police further shared that so far, five people have been injured in Tanahun, one person in Gulmi, two people in Okhaldhunga, three people in Kathmandu, one in Chitwan and six people in Syangja.
The police said that due to the heavy rains, life has been affected across the country and the water level in major rivers including Koshi and Narayani is high.
Even today, the police are continuing to patrol and monitor the banks of rivers and streams in Kathmandu Valley.
Spokesperson Karki said that the water level in the river in the Valley has increased due to incessant rainfall.
Security personnel from all three security agencies have been mobilized in the affected areas with high alertness, the Police Headquarters said.
7, 000 people likely to be affected by landslides and floods in Tanahun
As many as 7,000 people will likely be affected due to the landslides and floods this year in Tanahun district, according to the Emergency Response Plan, 2024 prepared by the District Administration Office, Tanahun.
It is estimated that 70,000 people of 15,969 households in the entire Gandaki Province will be affected due to monsoon-induced disasters this year. The Plan has listed landslide as the number one risk this year in Tanahun, said Janardhan Gautam, the Chief District Officer and Chair of the District Disaster Management Committee.
"The estimates have been made on the basis of the scientific analysis of data. The risk of landslides is much higher in Tanahun district compared to other disasters," CDO Gautam added. Based on the data from 2010 to 2020 made available by the Ministry of Home Affairs, the vulnerable population to monsoon-induced disasters in 2081 BS is around one million and 250 thousand.
According to the Chief District Officer, the District Disaster Management Committee is prepared for responding to the disasters.
Four urban municipalities and six rural municipalities in the district are at high risk of landslides. The Plan identifies high risk of flooding, fires, epidemics, drought, road accident, lightning and storm in the district after the landslide.
It is stated that 48 of the total 85 wards of 10 local levels in the district are at high risk of landslide.
Floods, landslides displace 81 families in Taplejung
Three hundred and forty-two people from 81 families have been displaced due to floods and landslides since the start of the monsoon precipitation in Taplejung.
Chief District Officer Rabindra Prasad Acharya said that five people lost their lives to landslide incidents in a period of a week. According to him, eight houses have been completely damaged while 18 more are at high risk due to landslides.
CDO Acharya added that 55 houses are at risk of landslides in various places in the district. "Eighty-four cattle have been killed due to the flood and landslide. Four vehicles have been damaged while the four bridges, including two motorable wooden bridges, have been washed away by the flood," he said.
Stating that 70 displaced families have been sheltering at the homes of their relatives and neighbours, he said 11 families are taking shelter at a nearby school.
The highest numbers of displaced families are from Sirijangha, Sidingwa, Mikwakhola and Phaktanglung rural municipalities. Four members of the same family were killed when their house was swept away by landslide at Phaktanglung-2 while one person from Phidim, Panchthar died at Sirijangha.
Landslides triggered by the incessant rain have damaged the roads as well as the hydroelectricity projects in most of the rural areas. The local governments are making efforts to repair the roads. Most of the rural roads have been obstructed in Sirijangha and Phaktanglung rural municipalities, CDO Acharya said.
The locals said that the flooding and landslides have caused most damage on cardamom farming. The people in the rural areas are living in fear of rain-induced disasters as it has been raining daily.
Five Nepalis missing in Sikkim floods come into contact
Five persons from Ilam, who went out of contact following flash floods and landslides, in Sikkim, India have come into contact with their families.
It has been learnt that they have recently made contact with their families by phone and social media. The families of Sen Bahadur Karki, Kumar Basnet, Naramaya Basnet, Khusi Karki and Lhakpa Lama of Ilam Municipality-9 are happy and felt a great sense of relief after they contacted home 11 days after the disaster.
Assistant Chief District Officer of Ilam Dhruba Prasad Koirala said they have been informed by the families of the five persons that they have contacted home. He said the five persons were on their way back home, according to their family sources.
Power supply to places where the Nepalis were residing and surrounding areas was cut off after the flooding. It is said that these people could not call back home as the means of communication were also dysfunctional for lack of electricity.
The five people had gone missing after the flooding in the Teesta River on October 3.
A cloud burst over Lhonak Lake in north Sikkim resulted in a flash flood in the Teesta River in Lachen Valley on 4 October.
At least 14 people died and 102 went missing. The floods in Sikkim that started around 1.30 am was made worse by the release of water from Chungthang dam. Several towns, including Dikchu, Singtam, and Rangpo located in the Teesta basin, were affected by the floods.





