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          .Patna, Aug 21 (IANS) Hundreds of thousands of people have been   affected by floods in Bihar, with many forced to flee their homes and struggling   to survival under the open sky. Chief Minister Nitish Kumar Sunday carried out   an aerial survey of the affected areas, saying the situation is under control   and "there is no need to panic."
 
 |  His comment came after a survey of the worst-hit Bhagalpur district and other   areas. 
 He said that officials were directed to speed up relief and   rescue operations in flood affected 12 districts.
 
 An official of the   state disaster management department said that flood waters entered more than   1,000 villages under 350 panchayats and rising levels of most rivers threatened   to inundate many others.
 
 All the inundated villages were in districts   Bhagalpur, Muzaffarpur, Gopalganj, Araria, Purnia, Saharsa, Darbhanga, Madhepura   and Bagaha, officials said.
 
 "Water entered these villages after levels   rose in all the major rivers following heavy rains in the state and the   catchment areas of Nepal," a water resource department official   said.
 
 According to the Central Water Commission, the water level in the   Ganges crossed the red mark at several places. Similarly, the Kosi was flowing   above the danger mark and Mahananda at other places.
 
 Officials of the   department said that standing crops worth crores of rupees have been damaged and   road communication at several places has been snapped. "Rising rivers have badly   hit paddy cultivation and destroyed standing banana and maize crops in Bhagalpur   and other districts," he said.
 
 Bihar Water Resources Development Minister   Vijay Kumar Choudhary said all river embankments were safe and there was no need   to panic.
 
 In 2008, over three million people were rendered homeless in   Bihar when the Kosi river breached its bank upstream in Nepal and changed   course. It was said to be the worst flood in the state in the last 50   years.
 
 
 
 
      
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