Mumbai rain could continue for 48 hours in some parts of the city, say weathermen
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Incessant rain in Mumbai since morning
Weathermen believe rain could continue for 48 hours in some parts of city
Industrialist Anand Mahindra called it "typhoon-like weather" in a tweet
Incessant rain flooded low-lying areas of India's commercial capital and paralysed train services, with many stranded at stations. Poor visibility hit flights. Thousands waded through water to reach home and children were sent home early from school.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi tweeted that he has spoken to Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis and assured all possible support. "Urge the people of Mumbai and surrounding areas to stay safe and take all essential precautions in the wake of the heavy rain," he added.
"It isn't a panic situation but only step outside your house is absolutely necessary," said Aditya Thackeray, whose Shiv Sena party controls the city's civic body BMC.

It has been raining in Mumbai incessantly since morning
The Maharashtra government ordered offices to allow employees to leave early. All schools and colleges in Mumbai will remain closed tomorrow, said Education Minister Vinod Tawde.
After a continuous downpour, most of Mumbai was submerged by afternoon. People were advised to avoid beaches and promenades, which will impact the ritual immersion of Ganesha idols, an annual event.
"This is not a river, but a road," an NDTV correspondent said, standing in water at Lower Parel in central Mumbai. At Elphinstone, cars and bikes peeped out of flood-water.

Mumbai rain has flooded some low-lying areas, slowed down traffic
Many subways were shut down. Rainwater flooded the King Edward Memorial Hospital, forcing doctors to vacate the paediatric ward.
The Mumbai police tweeted urging people to dial 100 for help.
Weathermen have cautioned people against scheduling meetings or flights at least till tomorrow. "Heavy to very heavy rain" has been predicted for at least the next 24 hours in Mumbai and its suburbs.

Mumbai rain: Met department said about four inches of rain was recorded in just a few hours
Floods in 2005 killed more than 500 people in the city. The majority of deaths occurred in shanty town slums, which are home to more than half of Mumbai's population.
"Every year it's the same story, the roads are bad anyway...rain brings double takleef (double the problem)," said a shopkeeper.
The famous Mumbai Dabbawalahs or tiffin-men delivering lunch got off their bikes and walked, firm on completing their job even in the terrible weather.
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