Meanwhile, after being pounded by a record-breaking downpour early this week, Bengaluru was on the road to recovery.
The city's famous Bellandur lake continued to spew 'toxic froth' but it is reducing because of recedingrains.
In the national capital, the minimum temperature was recorded at 29 degrees, while the maximum stood at 37.8 degrees Celsius. No rainfall was reported in Delhi.
Continuous rains and discharge of water in rivers worsened the deluge situation in eastern Uttar Pradesh, where Army had to be called in.
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As many as 105 villages of the district have been hit by the floods, of which 35 are totally submerged and the villagers have been shifted to safer places, they said.
According to a report from Siddhartnagar, army helicopters assisted in extending relief material to the affected.
Several districts in the eastern region of the state including Balrampur, Basti, Siddhartnagar, Barabanki, Ayodhya, Lakhimpur, Mahrajganj, Gonda are facing floods.
West Bengal Panchyat Minister Subrata Mukherjee said roads and pipelines for supplying drinking water have been badly damaged in the calamity.
Nearly 15 lakh people have been affected by the floods in Coochbehar, Dakshin Dinajpur, Uttar Dinajpur, Jalpaiguri, Alipurduar and Malda districts in north Bengal since July 21.
Train services to different destinations in north Bengal and Assam from Howrah and Sealdah stations remained suspended on the sixth consecutive day, a railway spokesman said.
Bus services between the southern and northern parts of the state also remain suspended for the last five days owing to inundation of national highway 34 and 31 and state highways at different places in north Bengal.
However, officials said the situation has improved in the state as no fresh spell of rainfall was reported.
According to a report by the Assam State Disaster Management Authority (ASDMA), three persons died in Dhubri, while two people lost their lives in Morigaon in flood related incidents.
In Baksa, Barpeta, Bongaigaon, South Salmara, Kamrup and Kokrajhar districts, one person each died due to floods, it said.
The third wave of flood has so far claimed the lives of 60 persons across the state. With these, the total number of persons losing their lives in this year's flood-related incidents in Assam went up to 144, including eight in Guwahati.
As per the report issued today, Morigaon was the worst affected followed by Dhubri in the state. A total of 2,210 villages were under water and 1.23 lakh hectares of crop were inundated and damaged, they said.
The authority added that Brahmaputra river was flowing above the danger mark at Nimatighat in Jorhat, Goalpara and Dhubri towns.
The India Meteorological Department (IMD) said the eastern state of Odisha was likely to experience heavy rainfall in next 24 hours due to a low pressure area created over northwest Bay of Bengal and adjoining coastal region of the state.
As per the MeT bulletin, Gaya received highest rainfall at 62.6 mm followed by 22.8 mm in Bhagalpur, 21.4 mm in Patna and 0.5 mm in Purnea.
With south west monsoon being normal in Bihar during past 24 hours, places like Chapra received 6 cm of rainfall, Palmerganj, Jalalpur, Goraul received 3 cm each while Jhajha, Bihpur, Bhagalpur, Patna Aerodrome, Deo, Sripalpur, Rajauli, Katoria, Bodh Gaya registered 2 cm each, it said.
In Himachal Pradesh, a landslide near Dochi village in Kharapathar blocked vehicular traffic on Rohru Theog road in Shimla district besides partially damaging a house.
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