Nothing Special   »   [go: up one dir, main page]

2005 Gujarat flood

(Redirected from 2005 Gujarat Flood)

The 2005 Gujarat floods, during the monsoon season, affected the state of Gujarat, India, that included 20 districts (out of 33), with 10 of them severely affected. 117 of the 225 Tehsils (Talukas or mandals), 11 cities were included, and more than 7,200 villages inundated, with up to 10,000 affected. The cumulative 505 millimetres (19.9 in) of rain left approximately 176,000 people homeless during the flooding that included the drowning of a rare Asiatic lion from the Gir wildlife sanctuary. At least 173 people were killed in the flooding.[1]

2005 Gujarat flood
Aerial view of flood in Gujarat
Meteorological history
DurationJune–July 2005
Overall effects
Fatalities173 dead, approx. 176,000 homeless
Areas affectedGujarat
An aerial view taken from the IAF relief Helicopter of the flood in Gujarat

History

edit

Eleven cities were severely affected by the floods that were Vadodara, Nadiad, Ahmedabad, Navsari, Surat and Limbdi, Dakor, Anand, Kheda, Petlad, and Borsad.[2]

Timeline

edit
 
Southerns districts of Gujarat.
last week of,
June, 2005
Heavy down-pour on many parts of Gujarat
June 30 the state was put on high alert, the army on standby
July 1 All trains on the Ahmedabad-Mumbai line are cancelled
July 2 Death toll reaches to 123, more than 250,000 people evacuated
July 7 Rain stops, order is restored slowly in some parts of the state
July 8 Trains resumes operations, but under restrictions and caution
July 11 Overall infrastructure damage and loss estimated to be over USD 1.7 bn.
Districts of southern Gujarat are worst affected.
July 13 As per the latest report total number of deaths due to floods in the state reach up to 173. [1]

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ a b "India Gujarat floods: Field updates & appeal". reliefweb.int. SEEDS INDIA. Retrieved 7 December 2017.
  2. ^ "Gujarat Floods 2005: Project Report" (PDF). Report. International Association for Human Values and the Art of Living. 2005. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 12, 2016. Retrieved November 1, 2015.
edit