Flood toll in India’s tourist hotspot Kerala jumps to 67

More than 50,000 people are seeking shelter in relief camps, a state official said, after severe seasonal rains

Laborers hailing from northern states wade through flood waters as they shift to higher grounds following heavy rains in Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala state, India, Wednesday, Aug. 15, 2018. Torrential monsoon rains have disrupted air and train services in the southern Indian state of Kerala where flooding, landslides, house and road bridge collapses have killed more than 40 people in the past week, officials said Wednesday. (AP Photo)
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The flood toll in India's southern tourist hotspot of Kerala jumped to 67 after another 25 deaths were reported Wednesday, with more than 50,000 people seeking shelter in relief camps, a state official said.

Kerala, famed for its pristine palm-lined beaches and tea plantations, is battered by the monsoon every year, but the rains have been particularly severe this season, flooding hundreds of villages and prompting the authorities to suspend flights in and out of the region.

"Twenty-five deaths were confirmed earlier in the evening. The situation is bad in many parts of the state and the number [of deaths] will likely increase," a senior official from the Kerala State Disaster Management Authority said .

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Unconfirmed local media reports mentioned a much higher toll and cited ongoing efforts to reach many flooded areas.

The official added that authorities had issued a "red alert" warning in all 14 districts of the flood-ravaged state, with heavy downpours expected in the next 24 hours in many of the worst-affected areas.

Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan's office announced on Twitter that Kochi International Airport – the main gateway to the region – would be closed until Saturday because of "heavy rains and resultant flooding".

Mr Vijayan held emergency meetings with rescue officials in the state late on Wednesday and discussed the situation with Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

The chief minister has requested the deployment of additional personnel from the Indian army, navy and other emergency forces who are already working across the state, which is home to about 33 million people.

“Our state is in the midst of an unprecedented flood havoc,” Mr Vijayan said earlier this week. “The calamity has caused immeasurable misery and devastation.”

Authorities have opened the gates of 34 reservoirs as water reached dangerous levels.

Mr Vijayan's office said on Wednesday that the authorities were also worried about rising water levels in the massive Mullaperiyar Dam, and urged officials in neighbouring state Tamil Nadu to release water from the reservoir.

Hundreds of villages have been flooded, while more than 10,000 kilometres of roads and thousands of homes have been destroyed or damaged across the state, officials said.

“We have asked all airlines, domestic and foreign, to reschedule their Cochin [Kochi] flights either from Trivandrum or from Calicut [Kozhikode],” Suresh Prabhu, India’s civil-aviation minister, said on Twitter.

“For international flights, this will require special dispensation which has been granted considering the emergency DGCA [Directorate General of Civil Aviation] is co-ordinating,” he added.

The US embassy last week advised Americans to avoid Kerala, which drew more than one million foreign tourists last year according to official data.