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PHOTOS: Rescue Teams Respond To Historic Flood In Chennai

A family wades through the waterlogged city on Wednesday after weeks of heavy rain.
STRDEL Getty Images
A family wades through the waterlogged city on Wednesday after weeks of heavy rain.

At Chennai's Tambaram Air Force Station, soldiers load food supplies onto a chopper in advance of air-drop on Friday.
Anindito Mukherjee Reuters/Landov
At Chennai's Tambaram Air Force Station, soldiers load food supplies onto a chopper in advance of air-drop on Friday.

An elderly woman and a dog are carried from floodwaters by National Disaster Response Force personnel.
Arun Sankar AP
An elderly woman and a dog are carried from floodwaters by National Disaster Response Force personnel.

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Navy personnel distribute food packets to residents in flooded areas of Chennai on Friday.
Arun Sankar AP
Navy personnel distribute food packets to residents in flooded areas of Chennai on Friday.

Commuters in Chennai wait at a railway station after most of the city's trains were suspended due to flooding.
STR AP
Commuters in Chennai wait at a railway station after most of the city's trains were suspended due to flooding.

Submerged cars and stalled mass transport have left thousands of residents stranded in Chennai.
STR Getty Images
Submerged cars and stalled mass transport have left thousands of residents stranded in Chennai.

Indian residents attempt to cross a waterlogged highway in Chennai on Thursday.
STRDEL Getty Images
Indian residents attempt to cross a waterlogged highway in Chennai on Thursday.

Rescue workers travel in the claw of a bulldozer as they work to rescue stranded residents on Thursday.
STRDEL Getty Images
Rescue workers travel in the claw of a bulldozer as they work to rescue stranded residents on Thursday.

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An Indian rescue helicopter lifts a man off an apartment roof on Friday.
STR AFP/Getty Images
An Indian rescue helicopter lifts a man off an apartment roof on Friday.

Relatives gather outside Chennai's Madras Institute of Orthopaedics and Traumatology hospital on Friday after their family members reportedly died after a power outage caused ventilators to fail.
STR AFP/Getty Images
Relatives gather outside Chennai's Madras Institute of Orthopaedics and Traumatology hospital on Friday after their family members reportedly died after a power outage caused ventilators to fail.

Child and milk packets in hand, a woman wades through a flooded street in Chennai on Saturday.
Anindito Mukherjee Reuters/Landov
Child and milk packets in hand, a woman wades through a flooded street in Chennai on Saturday.

A woman stands outside a submerged temple on Friday.
Anindito Mukherjee Reuters /Landov
A woman stands outside a submerged temple on Friday.

Chennai, India, is facing a slow recovery from its worst flooding in a century, which has killed at least 280 people since early November.

A short dry spell and receding water levels in a few areas are providing some respite to thousands of stranded residents, and the civilian and government-run relief workers navigating the densely populated city. Still, for many residents aid can't come soon enough.

"The Indian army, navy and air force have been deployed to rescue thousands stranded in Chennai, but according to local media, help is slow reaching them," NPR's Julie McCarthy tells our Newscast unit. "Torrential rains in the southern city have destroyed roads and rail links, shut down Chennai's airport and submerged industrial districts. Hundreds of thousands have been rendered homeless. Intermittent power is slowly returning. "

The airport is now partially opened, according to The Associated Press, and the National Disaster Response Force, a federal emergency response program, plans to deploy "20 more teams in addition to the 28 already on the ground, making it the force's largest deployment to a flood disaster."

Some of the hardest-hit parts of the southern state of Tamil Nadu logged as much as eight feet of water, reports Reuters, after a three-day rain spell, leaving many stranded on rooftops and trapped in buildings.

The potential causes of the deluge are gaining attention from world leaders as climate talks continue in Paris, adds McCarthy. Critics have cited the country's unregulated urban sprawl and its growing frequency of extreme weather. Heavy rainstorms are normal for India's eastern coastal region around monsoon season, which usually concludes by December, but "the intensity of this rainfall is unusual," says McCarthy. India's Meteorological Department projects a few more days of heavy rainfall next week.

Images from around the region, which you can see in the slideshow above, show residents and responders impacted by the record-setting flood. And beware of the doctored image floating around, showing Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi looking at the flooding from an aircraft window during his Chennai visit on Thursday. The since-deleted image was posted to Twitter by the government's Press Information Bureau before it went viral.

Copyright 2015 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.