DISASTER Hundreds of Thousands Marooned By Floods: India

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Many remain on rooftops (weeks) and are eating leaves to stay alive. Boat rescuers extorting money for rides to safety.

Quotes:

"Some villagers have been living on rooftops for days, while others are eating plants and leaves after exhausting food stocks.

Three million people have been displaced from their homes and at least 90 killed by the flooding, officials say, after the Kosi river burst a dam in Nepal.

Water swamped hundreds of villages in Bihar and destroyed 250,000 acres of farmlands.

Hundreds of boats are being used to evacuate people but heavy rains during the past few days have hampered rescue and relief operations.

The army has been deployed to help but officials say the situation on the ground is getting desperate."
 

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Update: www.voanews.com

India Rushes Medical Help to Flood Victims in Country's East
By VOA News
06 September 2008



Authorities in eastern India are rushing medical help to thousands of people displaced by flood waters, in order to keep disease from spreading.

India's health secretary said Friday said 300 tons of medicine, millions of chlorine tablets, vaccines and teams of doctors were being sent to relief camps in the state of Bihar.

Officials say hundreds of cases of diarrhea and other water-borne diseases are already being reported in government-run shelters, due to water contamination.

Flood waters have receded in some areas, prompting some villagers to return to their homes today, despite government warnings that the swollen Kosi River could overrun its banks again.

Authorities say many of the areas will likely remain flooded until the monsoon rains taper off in November.

The flooding began two weeks ago when the Kosi River burst its banks in neighboring Nepal, causing river water to spill into India.

Tens of thousands of people have also been displaced in northeastern India's Assam state, Nepal and Bangladesh. Officials say the floods have killed at least 80 people -- a figure they expect to rise.

South Asia's monsoon season runs from June to September.
 

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From BBC:

Warning over India flood victims

Bihar's flood victims face further danger in camps, agencies say
More than 250,000 people displaced by floods in the Indian state of Bihar could spend up to six months in temporary camps.

The camps will be kept open until flood waters recede, Bihar's chief minister, Nitish Kumar, says.

Floods have also displaced thousands in India's Assam state and in Bangladesh.

Hundreds of thousands of people forced from their homes by the disaster are at risk of disease and starvation, according to aid agencies.

The agencies say conditions in relief camps in Bihar are cramped and unhygienic and hundreds of cases of diarrhoea, pneumonia and fever have already been reported.

Doctors in the camps have begun immunising flood victims in the hope of countering the spread of disease.

Aid agencies also warn that the number of those killed may rise as receding flood waters wash more bodies ashore.

Rising waters

The floods in Bihar began on 18 August when monsoon rains caused the Kosi river to break its eastern bank in Nepal, where the river is often called the Saptakoshi.

The river's flow is regulated by a barrage on the Nepalese side of the border which was built in the late 1950s.

Bihar's Chief Minister Nitish Kumar says the flood victims will need to be supported for up to six months as the flood waters are unlikely to recede before then.

The rescue mission to evacuate those stranded has been called off but thousands of people have refused to leave their homes while some others have begun to return to their villages.

The government has been trying to persuade them to stay away.

In the Indian state of Assam, meanwhile, 19 of 27 districts have been flooded after the Brahmaputra river burst its banks.

Some 1.5m people have been displaced in the state, a local emergency official told AFP news agency.

In Bangladesh, flood waters have continued to rise as a result of heavy rains.

One-third of the country's districts have been affected by the floods and some 200,000 people have been displaced.
 

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Baby rescued from India floods

Villagers rescued a woman and her baby after they were swept away by floodwaters in the eastern state of Bihar, India.

The mother was wading through dangerous currents to reach a safer place when she drifted into the swollen Kosi River which had burst its banks.

Up to a hundred people have died in the region as a result of the floods and more than three million have been displaced.

Read more here: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/7606687.stm
 
Last edited:

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http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/7608885.stm

India flood investigation ordered

An inquiry has been ordered to find out whether official negligence contributed to devastating floods which hit the east Indian state of Bihar last month.

Flood waters swept through the state after bursting through a dam on the Kosi River in neighbouring Nepal.

With vast swathes of Bihar still under water, a litany of accusations has emerged of incompetence and neglect.

More than two million people have been displaced from their homes, and they are demanding answers.

Should embankments on the Kosi river have been strengthened before the onset of the monsoon?

Why was a series of warnings ignored and why did it take so long for the relief effort to get up to speed once disaster struck?

Fingers have also been pointed at widespread corruption and bribery on both sides of the border with Nepal.

It will take months for an official investigation to report and it will be months before the displaced can return to their homes.

Nearly 1,000 villages have been submerged in Bihar.

Hundreds of thousands of people are living in grim conditions in temporary camps, while even larger numbers have moved in with friends and relatives or have migrated to other parts of the country.
 

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from Reuters:

India's "river of sorrow" brings biblical flood
Thu Sep 11, 2008 4:02pm IST Email | Print | Share| Single Page[-] Text [+]
1 of 5Full SizeBy Bappa Majumdar

MADHEPURA, India (Reuters) - Most years, the Kosi river of eastern India is a tranquil stream that flows gently into the Ganges. But every few years it becomes a raging torrent, wreaking disaster on everything in its path.

That's what happened in August when after monsoon rains the Kosi burst its banks and flooded half of Bihar state, wiping out villages and farms and displacing more than 3 million people.

The river is notorious for such cataclysmic events and experts say the government should have been prepared for such a scenario and taken preventive action such as reinforcing embankments and removing silt from the river bed.

"This is the mother of all floods," said P.V. Unnikrishnan of aid agency ActionAid, summing up the devastation.

The Kosi, a tributary of the mighty Ganges, flooded an area roughly the size of Belgium. The floods changed the course of the river, shifting it 120 km (75 miles) towards a dry river channel it last flowed through 250 years ago.

"It looked angry, very angry and we could do nothing, absolutely nothing," said Kashiram Singh, a farmer.

When Kadam Lal was a little boy, his grandfather would tell him stories about the terrifying floods unleashed by the Kosi. Now he has seen with his own eyes why the Kosi is called the "River of Sorrow".

"Over 100 acres of my land was gone within minutes," said Lal, a now grey-haired farmer, pointing at a swirling barrage of muddy water powering down what were once lush green fields.

POOR PLANNING

It's the Kosi's worst flooding in 50 years, but not all of it is nature's doing.

Poor planning, corruption and government apathy contributed to the devastating floods which have left tens of thousands of villagers in relief camps, many with little food.

When the Kosi first broke through the embankment intended to contain it on August 18, the breach was about 1 km long, but 24 hours later it had widened to over 15 km (9 miles).

Experts say the floods could have been avoided if the embankments in Nepal at the river's mouth had been reinforced as recommended by engineers who sent letters to New Delhi in April urging that such measures be taken.

Flowing from the Nepalese Himalayas, the embankments are maintained by India under an agreement with Nepal.

As the Kosi's waters began to rise, engineers faxed messages to the Bihar government desperately pleading for emergency measures be taken to alleviate the expected flooding.

Nothing was done and now half of Bihar, one of India's poorest states, is covered in water.

Engineers might only be able to plug the gap in December when the water flow decreases during the dry season, but the river may never return to its former route.

"It is an extremely difficult job at hand as the entire river is flowing through the new route," Nitish Mishra, Bihar's disaster management minister told Reuters.

"People should get away from its path now."

In 1956, India and Nepal built a dam in the Himalayas to control the Kosi's flow. It took seven years to build the dam and a 39-km (24 miles) embankment to jacket the extremely turbulent river. Once completed, authorities virtually forgot all about it.

"The silt continued to deposit and the river bed rose without anyone thinking about dredging and de-silting," said Sunita Narain, a climate change expert in New Delhi.

The inevitable happened last month when the river flooded following heavy rains.

The damage is also economic. Bihar is the fifth largest producer of rice in India and agriculture experts say it will take a long time for the region to recover.

"The impact of the floods will have a much larger regional effect," said B.P. Singh, president of the All India Grain Exporters.

Left with no means of earning a living, hundreds of farmers are migrating to western India in search of jobs.

"They don't have any choice, but I will stay here and watch," said the bespectacled Kadam Lal. "I am too old to join them now," he said as 20 men left the village.
 

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India flood death toll rises
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Updated September 22, 2008 09:37:53

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The death toll caused by heavy rains and flooding in India over the weekend has increased to 173.

Most of the casualties are reported from India's most populous northern state of Uttar Pradesh with 110 people dead in rain related accidents.

State officials say many people were crushed when incessant rains and strong winds triggered house collapses.

Further north, in Himachal Pradesh, 46 people have died in the heavy rains lashing the state.

In eastern Orissa, 17 people were washed away and 2.4 million people left homeless after four rivers burst their banks and flooded villages.

Indian Air Force helicopters are dropping food packets to people in the worst affected districts.

Link: http://www.radioaustralia.net.au/news/stories/200809/s2370449.htm?tab=latest
 
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