Re: Prime Minister to visit flood affected districts of Bihar

2008-08-27 Thread Girish Mishra
Floods have been a regular feature in North Bihar since time immemorial.
With deforestation in Nepal and the lack of strong embankments, the fury
has increased. The Government of Bihar has failed to evolved a reliable
strategy to control floods. The people in power have only been interested
in extracting money from both the Central and State governments in the
name of relief in order to enrich themselves. Wherever there are are
embankments, they are not properly maintained nor is the rising levels of
rivers monitored and actions taken accordingly. India must collaborate
with Nepal to evolve a joint long-term strategy to prevent floods whether
in Kosi, Baghmati, Gandak or other rivers. Every year after flood waters
recede the State government goes into a deep slumber.

Girish Mishra



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 New Delhi, Aug 27, 2008: Indian Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh is all
 sit to visit flood ravaged districts of Bihar. Kosi a river that flows in
 the Indian state of Bihar from Nepal has threatened several million people
 living in half a dozen districts of the poor north Indian state.

   Around 45 people have already been killed in surging flood waters that
 have already flooded hundreds of villages in districts bordering Nepal.

 More than a million people have already been affected by the flood that is
 threatening to take a magnitude seen never before.

 The state chief minister Nitish Kumar has pushed the panic button and has
 asked people living in the affected districts to vacate the whole area.
 His government that mostly runs on central government handouts does not
 have the means to evacuate several million population.

 The chief minister is already talking of keeping the affected people in
 relief camps for the next eight to nine months.

 “'Keeping ten lakh people in relief camps for eight-nine months would be a
 challenge”, said Nitish Kumar.

 This is the worst flood in Bihar’s history. Millions of people are on the
 verge of being displaced from their lands, with hundreds of thousands
 fearing never to be able to return to the lands where they have spent
 their lifetime.

 Kosi river has played havoc with the people of Bihar on a proportion never
 ever thought possible. Around 45 people have already been killed in
 surging flood that threaten to submerge four districts of the Bihar state
 near Indo-Nepal border.

 The state government that has been sleeping over the mammoth tragedy is
 slowly coming to terms with the magnitude of the problem.

 Finally it seems that Kosi river that is nicknamed ‘Ssorrow of Bihar’ has
 brought them out of their deep slumber. But a lot of damage has already
 been done.

 The river Kosi picked up a channel it had abandoned over 200 years ago
 almost a week ago. The river has broken its embankment drowning towns and
 villages and affecting several million people.

 Nitish Kumar, the Chief Minister of Bihar met Prime Minister Dr Manmohan
 Sing to seek his help in dealing with the catastrophe caused by floods
 after the river Koshi suddenly changed its course in neighbouring Nepal.

 Former chief minister of the state and Railway Minister Lalu Prasad Yadav
 who also met Manmohan Singh later said, “Three helicopters are already air
 dropping food materials but it will not make much difference. More and
 more Air Force helicopters should be pressed into crisis management and
 more boats to rescue those who are trapped and taken to safe area if we
 rely on the State government assistance we will be responsible for the
 death of thousands more to be killed in this flood”.

 Nitish Kumar said that calling the tragedy a flood will be an
 understatement. He added, “Flood is understatement, it is a disaster. Our
 top priority is to evacuate people and bring them to the safer places”.

 In the meantime local people are devastated. They say that they are not
 getting any help from administration. Muhammad Naushad who lives near
 Araria city said that he had to pay boatmen around Rs 5000 for the
 evacuation of his family of 7 members. He said that his house is under
 water and he is not sure how much of his house would be left when the
 water recedes.

 Chief Minister while talking to the reporters said, “Nearly 25 lakh people
 are waging a grim battle against the floods which have assumed proportions
 of a catastrophe. The nature is putting my government to test once again,
 but we will succeed”.

 But despite his tall claims of his government reaching out to victims, the
 condition on the ground is pathetic to say the least.

 The floods have affected 15 districts - Muzaffarpur, Patna, Katihar,
 Nalanda, West Champaran, Khagaria Sheikhpura, Purnia, Saran, Begusarai,
 Bhagalpur, Supaul, Saharsa, Madhepura and Araria.


  Bihar Group
   E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   http://yahoogroups.com/group/Bihar-Network








Re: Prime Minister to visit flood affected districts of Bihar

2008-08-27 Thread Dr. Walter Fernandes
Ir is true that floods have been a fact from time immemorial in the Gangetic 
and Bahmaputra valley, not merely in Bihar. However, in recent decades they 
have become a problem that they were not in the past because of their intensity 
caused by deforestation not merely in Nepal but also in India. The level of the 
Ganga has risen by about 8 metres in the last 50 years. Climate change caused 
by environmental degradation has resulted in the melting of the glaciers. 
Because of deforestation the earth does not absorb rain water in the same 
manner as it used to do in the past.

When floods were a regular annual occurrence they were not merely a problem but 
also a blessing. In Assam, for example, the floods used to bring nutrients 
because of which the crop which the people used to plant after the floods used 
to be very good. Today they have become more intense than the past and all the 
advantages have disappeared. The damage is greater and have become only a 
curse. That is where we need to find new answers to them

Walter Fernandes

Dr Walter Fernandes
Director, North Eastern Social Research Centre
110 Kharghuli Road (1st floor)
Guwahati 781004
Assam, India
Tel (91-361) 2602819
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
www.creighton.edu/CollaborativeMinistry/NESRC

  - Original Message - 
  From: Girish Mishra 
  To: Jharkhand@yahoogroups.co.in 
  Sent: Wednesday, August 27, 2008 4:37 PM
  Subject: Re: Prime Minister to visit flood affected districts of Bihar


  Floods have been a regular feature in North Bihar since time immemorial.
  With deforestation in Nepal and the lack of strong embankments, the fury
  has increased. The Government of Bihar has failed to evolved a reliable
  strategy to control floods. The people in power have only been interested
  in extracting money from both the Central and State governments in the
  name of relief in order to enrich themselves. Wherever there are are
  embankments, they are not properly maintained nor is the rising levels of
  rivers monitored and actions taken accordingly. India must collaborate
  with Nepal to evolve a joint long-term strategy to prevent floods whether
  in Kosi, Baghmati, Gandak or other rivers. Every year after flood waters
  recede the State government goes into a deep slumber.

  Girish Mishra

   '); document.write(''); document.write('');
   document.write(''); document.write(''); //--
  
   New Delhi, Aug 27, 2008: Indian Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh is all
   sit to visit flood ravaged districts of Bihar. Kosi a river that flows in
   the Indian state of Bihar from Nepal has threatened several million people
   living in half a dozen districts of the poor north Indian state.
  
   Around 45 people have already been killed in surging flood waters that
   have already flooded hundreds of villages in districts bordering Nepal.
  
   More than a million people have already been affected by the flood that is
   threatening to take a magnitude seen never before.
  
   The state chief minister Nitish Kumar has pushed the panic button and has
   asked people living in the affected districts to vacate the whole area.
   His government that mostly runs on central government handouts does not
   have the means to evacuate several million population.
  
   The chief minister is already talking of keeping the affected people in
   relief camps for the next eight to nine months.
  
   'Keeping ten lakh people in relief camps for eight-nine months would be a
   challenge, said Nitish Kumar.
  
   This is the worst flood in Bihar's history. Millions of people are on the
   verge of being displaced from their lands, with hundreds of thousands
   fearing never to be able to return to the lands where they have spent
   their lifetime.
  
   Kosi river has played havoc with the people of Bihar on a proportion never
   ever thought possible. Around 45 people have already been killed in
   surging flood that threaten to submerge four districts of the Bihar state
   near Indo-Nepal border.
  
   The state government that has been sleeping over the mammoth tragedy is
   slowly coming to terms with the magnitude of the problem.
  
   Finally it seems that Kosi river that is nicknamed 'Ssorrow of Bihar' has
   brought them out of their deep slumber. But a lot of damage has already
   been done.
  
   The river Kosi picked up a channel it had abandoned over 200 years ago
   almost a week ago. The river has broken its embankment drowning towns and
   villages and affecting several million people.
  
   Nitish Kumar, the Chief Minister of Bihar met Prime Minister Dr Manmohan
   Sing to seek his help in dealing with the catastrophe caused by floods
   after the river Koshi suddenly changed its course in neighbouring Nepal.
  
   Former chief minister of the state and Railway Minister Lalu Prasad Yadav
   who also met Manmohan Singh later said, Three helicopters are already air
   dropping food materials but it will not make much difference. More and
   more Air