A heavily pregnant woman stranded by floods in the Indian state
of Kerala gave birth just after being airlifted to safety, an Indian Navy
spokesman said, as the military stepped up rescue operations on Saturday.
Dozens of navy helicopters have embarked on high-risk missions
to save people from rooftops and isolated land as the southern state battles a
flood crisis that has left at least 324 people dead.
Sajita Jabeel, 25, was winched up by Commander Vijay Verma, who
has been widely praised for leading the rescue in the Aluva district of the
state’s main city Kochi.
“The lady was in labour, her water had broken,” Verma told
News18 television.
He called the relief mission “very challenging” and said his
team had rushed to find the family after receiving an emergency call.
“We took a doctor along, we winched her up, it took some time
though because we had to winch down two people to help her.”
Jabeel gave birth to a healthy baby boy after being rushed to
hospital.
Kerala, popular among international tourists for its tropical
hills and beaches, has been battered by record monsoon rainfall this year.
About 60 military and coast guard helicopters and hundreds of
boats are scouring the flood zones across the state for trapped victims.
The military said that tens of thousands have been rescued in
the past week, but thousands more are feared trapped.
Another pilot winched 26 people up from a rooftop in Kochi on
Friday while hovering between trees and other houses just two days after receiving
a medal for saving a fisherman last year.
A video of Captain P. Rajkumar’s Sea King helicopter pulling up
the victims has been widely shared on social media. He ended up with 32 people
on board.
“It was a life-threatening mission but it’s an unprecedented
situation. We can’t leave behind our people,” Indian Navy spokesman Captain
D.K. Sharma told AFP.
Rajkumar
was given the Shaurya Chakra medal for bravery this week after lifting a
fisherman from the sea when cyclone Ockhi hit India last year.

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