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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: India
Official indifference as South Asia floods affect 40 million
people
By Wimal Perera
30 July 2004
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Millions of people across the Indian subcontinent have been
affected by what are considered to be the worst floods in 15 years.
According to the latest figures, around 40 million people are
homeless and at least 1,300 people have been killed. Officials
have admitted that the final death toll could be much higher,
with rescue and relief measures still not reaching some areas.
Water-borne diseases are also expected to cause many more fatalities.
By July 28, Associated Press estimated that 768 had died in
India, 394 in Bangladesh, 102 in Nepal, 16 in Afghanistan, 5 in
Pakistan, and 3 in Bhutan. Causes of death included drowning,
diarrhea and other diseases, electrocution, landslides, lightning,
collapsing homes and snakebites. Diarrhea caused by dirty drinking
water has already killed 46 people and afflicted about 80,000
in Bangladesh, according to the governments Health Directorate.
The worst-affected areas are Bihar, Kerala, Uttar Pradesh,
Assam and Tripura in India; Rangpur, Kurigram, Gaibandha, Sylhet
and Bogra in Bangladesh; Nepals capital city Katmandu; and
the northwest Mardan District in Pakistan. In many places, the
regions swollen main riversthe Brahmaputra, Ganges
and Meghnahave overflowed and washed away villages, sometimes
breaking embankments. The hardest hit have been the urban and
rural poor who are often forced to live on flood-prone land.
Landslides have cut the northeastern Indian states, Nagaland,
Manipur, Mizoram and Tripura, from the rest of the country. In
Assam, 22 out of 24 districts are inundated. Chief Minister Gogoi
estimated that 10 billion rupees ($US200 million) worth of damage
had been done to the states infrastructure. Around
half of Guwahati, the capital of Assam, is submerged. Officially,
131 people have been killed and 10 million made homeless. In the
neighbouring state, Arunachal Pradesh, the BBC reported bridges,
embankments and other facilities collapsing as more and more villages
go under water.
The north Indian state of Bihar is severely affected by floods,
with 11 million homeless and more than 520 deaths. The BBC reported
on July 18: Survivors in Bihar are still clinging
to rooftops, and have been without much food for nearly a week.
According to government estimates, 238,000 houses have been damaged
and 150 million rupees worth of crops destroyed. This will have
disastrous consequences in the coming months for small farmers
and other poor residents.
In Bangladesh, 41 of countrys 64 districts have been
affected, with 30 million people stranded or homeless out of the
countrys 140 million population. The Relief Ministry estimates
that a million acres of crops, including rice paddies, have been
destroyed. Cattle, fishing boats and equipment have been washed
away. Schools and businesses have been closed. Electricity and
telephone connections have been severely disrupted. A Bangladeshi
newspaper, the Daily Star, reported on July 12: Rail
links between northern and northeastern districts and the capital
remained cut-off for the fourth day yesterday.
Much of the capital Dhaka is under water. The British-based
Guardian reported that shanty towns in low-lying areas
were flooded, with residents left floundering in filth from the
citys failed sewage system. Holding their belongings
over their heads, residents of the Mugdapara district waded through
the waist-deep floodwaters, which had mixed with sewage and turned
blackish and foul-smelling.
Bangladeshs biggest port Chittagong is also flooded.
The countrys lone hydroelectric dam on the Karnaphuli River
in Kaptai was under threat, its plant manager stated. In the Bogra
district, 250 km northwest of Dhaka, a dam burst on the Jamuna
River, sweeping away 60 people, including 4 children, on July
16.
A 35-year-old mother of two told the AFP news service: We
were sleeping when the water came and suddenly we were surrounded.
We couldnt save anythingwe just saved our lives by
swimming to this road. She described the miserable conditions
they now face without food or other relief supplies. We
have to sleep in the open because we have nothing, no food, no
water, no blankets, no shelter. Ramisa Begum, 30, a widow
with three children told the International Herald Tribune:
I dont mind going hungry, but I cant see my
children going without food.
Inadequate relief measures
Throughout the affected areas across the subcontinent, people
have been forced to take shelter in schools, on river embankments,
in trees, and on rooftops, sometimes without tents, getting soaked.
Millions lack food, drinking water and medicine, because of the
failure of governments to provide basic supplies.
This desperate situation is the result of decades of indifference
by the governments of the region and the lack of any significant
international effort to plan adequate relief measures, let alone
address the underlying causes of the flooding. Every year the
monsoons arrive, swelling the rivers of the Ganges-Brahmaputra-Meghna,
one of the worlds largest river basins, and spilling over
into low-lying areas. Bangladesh, which is a river delta country,
with most of its land massabout 80 percentsituated
in lowlands less than 10 metres above sea level, is particularly
vulnerable.
Yet each year politicians and officials wring their hands over
another natural calamity, hand out a pittance in aid
to the suffering millions and make a series of false promises
that measures will be taken to ameliorate the situation in the
future. In Bangladesh, for instance, the Khowai River project
in the flood-prone Habiganj district, was meant to provide flood
protection embankments. Started in 1976, it was supposed to be
completed by 1984, but still remains unfinished after 28 years.
Last year, 1,500 people died across South Asia during the monsoons,
which lasted from mid-June to mid-October. Nothing has been done
to ensure the tragedy this year will be any different.
The floods have once again exposed the inadequacy of government
evacuation plans and programs for providing basic accommodation,
food, clean water and medicine to hundreds of thousands of refugees.
Starvation and epidemic outbreaks have started to spread, with
doctors in Dhaka alone treating 500 to 600 patients, mostly children,
each day for diarrhea-related diseases.
In the Indian state of Bihar, the government has announced
that army helicopters have airdropped about 226 tonnes of food.
But these relief operations are so meagre that food riots erupted
in the Darbhang district. Reuters reported: Angry villagers
raided grain warehouses of the state-owned Food Corporation of
India in the Madhubani district on Friday [July 16], while
holding a senior civil servant captive for a while, complaining
of a snarl-up in aid distribution.
The Indian central government has given the Assam state government
1.81 billion rupees and deployed army and air force personnel
for rescue operations, including airdrops of food packets in flood-hit
areas. But victims have denounced the limited character of the
relief measures. One woman on the outskirts of Assams capital
Guwahati told the Hindu: For the last three days,
we have been starving and have not received anything from the
government. She added: My children are crying in hunger.
Visiting Assam, Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh pledged
to set up a panel to find a lasting solution to the floods. But
there is little reason to believe that years of neglect will change.
Just few days before Singhs visit, Assams Chief Minister
Tarun Gogoi appealed for international assistance. The state
is not adequately equipped to handle the rescue and relief operations,
he declared. It is no different in any country
in the region.
The Nepal government said relief material worth 4.2 million
rupees had been distributed in the affected areas. Yet, reports
emerged of angry people rallying in protest against the governments
delay in providing supplies and the sheer insufficiency of the
effort. Reuters quoted one Nepali: There is a short
supply of food and medicines in flood-affected areas and people
are starving.
Bangladeshs Ministry of Food and Disaster Management
reported it had distributed 2,650 metric tonnes of rice and 13,000
tins of biscuits, after allocating $US77,800 for relief assistance
and $66,200 for housing assistance. But this is completely dwarfed
by the magnitude of the disaster. Floods have engulfed two-thirds
of the country, displacing 1.3 million people. Villagers have
pitched tents on highways or mud embankments with their families
and cattle. In Dhaka some shelters have flooded and 10,000 people
are living in a soccer stadium.
Scientific and technical specialists have pointed to a number
of factors that are causing the annual floods in South Asia to
worsen. One of the consequences of rapidly expanding urban development,
much of it completely unplanned, is the creation of large areas
of concrete, stone and paving that collect and channel water but
without any proper drainage. As Hong Kong Baptist University meteorologist
Kenneth Wong bluntly explained: If they dont have
adequate storm run-off drainage, then flooding occurs.
For a number of years, experts have been warning of the dangers
of uncontrolled deforestation in the catchment areas that feed
the Ganges-Brahmaputra-Meghna river system. These include parts
of northern India, China, Nepal and Bhutan. The topsoil is stripped
from bare mountainsides and carried downstream, eventually to
be deposited on riverbeds, especially in Bangladesh. Speaking
at Dhaka University on July 21, French scholar Christian France-Larord
warned of more devastating floods in the future, due to deforestation
and industrialisation.
The reasons for the flooding are largely known. Previously
large-scale plans have even been drawn up to prevent or ameliorate
the impact of the annual deluge. What is completely lacking, however,
is the necessary cooperation between the various governments of
the region and the finance to implement the proposals. The root
cause of this recurring disaster lies in the anarchy of the profit
system and the artificial division of the region into competing
nation-states, all of which precludes any rational, scientific
and planned approach to the problem.
See Also:
South Asian floods
kill hundreds and leave millions homeless
[24 July 2004]
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