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Southern India Rains Leave at Least 12 Dead, Thousands Displaced


A boy pushes another in a bathtub in a waterlogged street in Chennai, India, Nov. 3, 2017. Incessant rainfall caused flooding and traffic jams in several parts of the southern Indian city Friday.
A boy pushes another in a bathtub in a waterlogged street in Chennai, India, Nov. 3, 2017. Incessant rainfall caused flooding and traffic jams in several parts of the southern Indian city Friday.

Thousands of people took refuge in relief camps as torrential monsoon rains flooded parts of southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu, killing at least 12 people this week, the government said Saturday.

Schools in Chennai, the state capital, and other coastal towns have been closed, and the weather office is warning of intermittent heavy rains this weekend.

A government statement said more than 10,000 people were living in 105 state-run relief camps as rains flooded low-lying areas in Chennai and its suburbs Thursday and Friday.

The northeast monsoon season in the region set in Oct. 27 and is expected to last until early December. Nearly 74 percent of the rainfall expected during the entire season was recorded in the first week, the state meteorological department said.

Chennai received more than 30 centimeters (11 inches) of rain in the past three days, raising fears of a repeat of the 2015 deluge in which 150 people died.

More than 10,000 fishermen stayed in port Saturday as the sea remained very rough with waves rising to several feet (meters).

The state’s top elected official, K. Palaniswami, visited several flooded parts of the city Friday and distributed food packets, clothes, mats and bed sheets to flood victims, the statement said.

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