Schools and colleges in Mumbai and neighbouring districts were also closed on Monday following a warning by the weather office.
Hundreds
of passengers were stuck in India's financial capital, Mumbai, and
nearby towns on Monday after two days of heavy
rain flooded rivers and undermined railway tracks, forcing
authorities to cancel or divert dozens of long-distance trains.
Rivers
in the western state of Maharashtra were flooded after authorities
released water from dams made full after many parts on the west coast
received more than 200 mm (8 inches) of rain.
Trains
were cancelled due to the heavy downpours and because a boulder fell
on one line, railway authorities said on Twitter.
Schools
and colleges in Mumbai and neighbouring districts were also closed on
Monday following a warning by the weather office of heavy rainfall,
the Maharashtra chief minister's office tweeted.
Financial
markets were open in Mumbai,
which is often touted as a potential rival to China's financial
powerhouse Shanghai but, like many Indian cities, is hampered by poor
infrastructure.
Hundreds
of houses and a few Hindu temples on the banks of the Godavari river
were flooded in the neighbouring town of Nashik after floodwater was
released from a dam.
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