Sri Lanka monsoon floods kill 14, schools shut
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox
Experts have warned that Sri Lanka faces more frequent floods as the world heats due to climate change.
PHOTO: AFP
Follow topic:
COLOMBO - Flash floods, mudslides and falling trees have killed at least 14 people in Sri Lanka as the island nation is battered by monsoon storms, the country’s disaster centre said on June 2.
Some drowned, including three members of the same family swept away near the capital Colombo on June 2.
Others were buried alive in mudslides, including an 11-year-old girl and a 20-year-old man, the Disaster Management Centre (DMC) said.
Nine other people were crushed and killed when trees fell on them in seven districts since the monsoon intensified on May 21, it added.
While Sri Lanka depends on the seasonal monsoon rain for irrigation as well as hydroelectricity, experts have warned that it faces more frequent floods as the world heats due to climate change.
The DMC said 20 out of the country’s 25 districts were affected by heavy rain and issued warnings to people living on the banks of main rivers to move to higher ground.
Flights arriving at Colombo’s main international airport were diverted to a smaller airport, and some key highways were flooded at several exits.
The government also ordered all schools to remain shut on June 3 after the weekend holiday, as more rain was forecast.
“There could be more heavy rain accompanied by strong wind and thunder,” the DMC said.
Last week, the wildlife authorities found seven carcasses of young elephants who drowned in the biggest single loss of the animals in five years.
The onset of the south-west monsoon triggered flooding in the elephant habitat in Dimbulagala, around 250km north-east of Colombo. AFP

