Pictures
of destruction after rain and strong winds hit Dhubri (p10182)
Noor
Ahmed with his son and his neighbour's daughter, Noor has lost
all his 45 acres of land to the last two years of flooding (p10185)

Waterlogged houses in Dhubri (p10183)

Drinking water supply in Nalbari Chaur (p10189)

Relief camp in Goalpara (p10184)
|
Floods in Assam affect millions
30 July 2003
By Pooja Saxena, in Assam
Standing on a massive deposit
of silt, or chaur land, where her house stood until recently, 75-year-old
Fatima Bibi cannot stop herself from cursing the Bhramaputra river.
“This is not a river but a man eating monster,” she says.
Her son Noor Abbas has gone to a distant village to sell firewood
so that he can purchase some rice for the family. Noor Abbas and Fatima
Bibi have many reasons to curse the river. Noor has just lost his
wife to severe diarrhoea contracted from polluted water, following
the floods in India’s north-eastern state of Assam. Besides
his aged mother, he now must care for his two young sons, six-year-old
Ahmed and four-year-old Ali.
Noor Ahmed has shifted his dwelling thrice in the past month. At the
moment he is residing under a tarpaulin sheet donated by the Red Cross.
He was, until recently, the proud owner of 15 bighas (45 acres) of
land, but over the past two years, severe flooding in his village
has swept away all trace of his land.
With 22 of its 24 districts affected, the state of Assam is reeling
under one of the most widespread flooding in a long time, the worst
floods in 50 years, according to the state’s chief minister.
With the massive Bhramaputra river and its numerous tributaries flowing
through, the state is prone to floods, which have an indelible impact
on the state’s population and their livelihoods. Vast stretches
of land along the river banks have been eroded away. In Dhemaji alone,
more than 600,000 people have been affected, with a worrisome health
situation arising from the spread of water-borne diseases. Cases of
viral fever, malaria, diarrhea and dysentery are increasing. The situation
is also critical in the districts of Morigaon and Dhubri in Brahmaputra
Valley and Hailakandi in Barak valley.
“At least 13 villages have been washed away in Morigaon,”
says Ashadul Islam, vice-president of the district council. Water-borne
diseases like gastroenteritis, dysentery, jaundice and malaria have
been on the rise, killing some 50 people.
The situation is so severe that the state’s efforts to provide
relief to the affected people have been insufficient, and in spite
of accelerated relief efforts, there are acute shortages of essential
commodities and clean drinking water, as well as an immense need for
health services.
Amanullah Khandar, president of the South Salmara Regional local government
says, “The floods this year were not only voluminous, but also
had very strong currents. It took tremendous efforts to carry out
relief and rescue operations by boat at the peak of flood”.
The India Red Cross Society was one of the first agencies to undertake
relief and rescue measures in the flood-affected districts, running
a mobile medical unit and two relief camps a month, each lasting about
15 days. Says Jamar Ali, a volunteer doctor on the Indian Red Cross
medical team: “We desperately need more medical teams. We provide
medical treatment to some 250 patients every day, mostly for infectious
water-borne diseases. We also provide free medicines.”
The India Red Cross Society is also in the process of distributing
family relief packages to 2,000 families. The family kits consist
of kitchen utensils, a plastic bucket, a saree, (women’s clothing),
dhotis (men’s clothing), bed sheets, cotton blankets, tarpaulin,
ground sheeting and towels.
The Indian government has begun spraying DDT in malaria-prone regions,
has opened 15 new health posts and set up eight relief camps in the
worst-affected districts of Dhemaji and Saharsa. Basic food items
such as rice, dal and salt are also distributed as well as medicines,
fodder and cattle feed for the surviving animals.
During the last floods the Assam state Red Cross branch not only distributed
14,000 family packs and constructed a raised platform in Nalbari but
also brought to the government’s notice that in one of the most
affected areas, Dhemaji and nearby regions, 70 hand tube wells were
not functioning due to silting and needed urgent repairing. This timely
diagnosis helped the local population as the local authorities rectified
it.
Related Links:
India: appeals, updates
and reports
India Red
Cross
Make a donation
|