India's Bengaluru hit by flooding, traffic snarls after heavy rain

BENGALURU, Sept 5 (Reuters) - Large parts of India's tech capital Bengaluru were under water on Monday after torrential rains uprooted trees, caused crippling traffic and forced offices to issue work-from-home orders to employees, raising fears of further disruptions through the week.
The Bangalore Urban district on Sunday received 28.1 mm rainfall, 368% more than the average, according to data compiled by the state-run India Meteorological Department (IMD).
The city has received 141% more rainfall than average since the start of monsoon season on June 1.
Bengaluru, home to various global companies as well as home-grown startups, has established itself as an important business centre in the country's southern region.
"Bengaluru and south interior Karnataka are likely to get heavy rainfall until Friday. From Saturday, rainfall activity will go down," said a senior weather official with IMD based in Pune.
On Monday, sources told Reuters that Morgan Stanley (MS.N), opens new tab and Goldman Sachs Group Inc (GS.N), opens new tab had asked their employees to work from home. IT major Wipro Ltd (WIPR.NS), opens new tab and Walmart's Flipkart said they had asked employees to work from home.
"After two years of work from home, companies are coming back and infrastructure has completely collapsed," said Krishna Kumar, General Manager at the Outer Ring Road Companies Association (ORRCA).
The group represents firms whose offices are located on the Outer Ring Road, which acts as a major connector in the city.
"Authorities need to focus on scaling up the infrastructure," Kumar said.
Monday's flooding forced citizens to empty basements and parking lots, spend more time on the roads in traffic and face power outages in places.
"Right now, we are all living in fear," said Deepa Babu, a psychologist who counsels adolescent kids and lives in Rainbow Drive, an enclave near the city's major tech hubs.
"Yesterday the boundary wall next to our house just collapsed," she added.
($1 = 79.8850 Indian rupees)

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Reporting by Sherry Mary Jacob, Akshay Lodaya, Nivedita Bhattacharjee and Nandan Mandayam in Bengaluru, Rajendra Jadhav in Mumbai; writing by Shilpa Jamkhandikar and Nivedita Bhattacharjee; Editing by Kim Coghill and Ana Nicolaci da Costa

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Nivedita writes about the business of space, space-startups and other related developing technologies that have the potential to impact the journey of humankind. Previously, she has covered the U.S apparel industry, the Indian tech-startup boom and other market and industry defining stories in her 14 years with Reuters. When not chasing her own stories, she is a desk editor.