Locals at a flood-affected area, in Paschim Medinipur district, West Bengal.
Parts of West Bengal are reeling under flood situation, which chief minister Mamata Banerjee has said is due to the "unbridled" release of water from Jharkhand via its Damodar Valley Corporation (DVC) dams. In a letter to PM on Friday, CM Mamata Banerjee said the state is now facing the biggest flood in Lower Damodar and adjoining areas after 2009. "More than 1,000 sqkm stands affected and nearly five million people of the state have been drawn into the vortex of miseries for loss of crops, damages to public infrastructure and private assets, including houses, cattle...I am compelled to call it a man-made flood," she wrote.
Locals at a flood-affected area, in Paschim Medinipur district, West Bengal.
People wade through floodwaters at a flood-affected area, in Paschim Medinipur district, West Bengal.
People wade through a waterlogged road in Santipur area flooded by Hooghly river, in Nadia, West Bengal.
People travel through a flooded area after heavy rains, at Udaynarayanpur in Howrah district of West Bengal.
A village woman walks through a flooded area to collect drinking water following heavy rains, at Udaynarayanpur in Howrah district of West Bengal.
A partially submerged residential building after heavy rains, at Udaynarayanpur in Howrah district of West Bengal.
A flooded area of Santipur along the Hooghly river, in Nadia, West Bengal.
A woman looks out of her house in a flooded area after heavy rains, at Udaynarayanpur in Howrah district of West Bengal.
West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee during a visit to the flood affected areas of Udaynarayanpur, in Howrah district of WB.
District administration with the help of villagers use cement bags in order to prevent flood water from entering the village after the Kuye river barrage broke due to heavy rain, in Birbhum district of West Bengal.