Asia's Urgent Call for Aid Amid Catastrophic Floods and Landslides
Following severe floods and landslides in Asia, over 1,500 people have died, with Indonesia, Sri Lanka, and Thailand most affected. Communities face infrastructure damage, contaminated water, and slow relief efforts. Survivors blame deforestation and corruption for exacerbating the disaster.
Emergency response teams are racing against time as catastrophic floods and landslides have devastated parts of Asia, resulting in more than 1,500 fatalities. Relief efforts are underway, yet the magnitude of the disaster has overwhelmed rescuers.
The confirmed death toll includes 883 in Indonesia, 486 in Sri Lanka, and 185 in Thailand. Many villages remain buried under mud, and almost 900 people are still missing in Indonesia and Sri Lanka. Infrastructure, including collapsed transmission towers, has been severely damaged, leaving several communities isolated.
With roads severed, reaching remote areas is challenging. Residents are pleading for clean water, sanitation, and shelter. Survivors attribute the severity of this crisis to rampant deforestation and corruption, expressing frustration over the slow pace of aid distribution.
(With inputs from agencies.)
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- corruption
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