OneWorld.net note: The Indian government should declare a national emergency to ensure relief quickly reaches the more than five million people affected by flooding, says an international aid organization.
Villagers throughout Orissa have been marooned by the floodwaters from the Mahanadi River. Many areas are now reachable only by boat. © UNICEFAt least 250,000 Indians and roughly 70,000 Nepalis have been forced out of their homes since the Koshi River -- the largest in Nepal, situated along the India-Nepal border -- overflowed on Aug. 18. Millions of people in India have been affected by the flooding and the numbers continue to grow as conditions worsen.
Thousands of civilians have been evacuated from Orissa, but relief workers are struggling to access those left behind. Despite such difficulties, groups like UNICEF are responding to survivors' medical and other needs, supplying tarpaulins for shelter, oral rehydration salts to prevent diarrhoeal dehydration, hygiene kits, blankets and water tanks.
Millions displaced, villages still cut off in Orissa’s worst flood in 26 years
From: ActionAid UK
With millions displaced and many still awaiting rescue in India’s
flood-hit Orissa state, ActionAid has said the situation should be
declared a ‘national calamity’, to allow the rapid deployment of
federal resources.
According to government reports, over five million people have
been affected by floods across 18 districts of Orissa. Continuous rains
caused the Mahanadi river to breach its banks in nearly a hundred
places, causing what media reports describe as Orissa’s worst flooding
in 26 years. 56 deaths have been reported.
After a national calamity was declared in August in the state of
Bihar, New Delhi rapidly mobilised funds, personnel and equipment for
flood rescue and relief work.
An ActionAid assessment team returning from the flood-affected
areas reported that the transport system has broken down as village
roads and rail tracks remain submerged. Boats are the only way to reach
most of the affected areas, but are in short supply. Remote villages
are cut off, and many people are still waiting for rescue and relief
teams to reach them.
The ActionAid team visited the flood affected districts of Cuttack, Jagatsinghpur, Khurda, Kendrapada, Nayagarh and Puri.
“A large number of the affected population in Khurda and Puri and
Nayagarh districts are dalits [formerly known as untouchables] and
tribal peoples,” said Manas Ranjan, ActionAid’s manager in Orissa.
ActionAid has worked in Orissa since the 1999 cyclone in which
around 10,000 people died. Community disaster preparedness programmes,
initiated after the cyclone, have proved vauable in the current floods.
“Where local volunteers and administration were active, villagers
were able to move to higher ground when alerted and could support
themselves with food stocks for the initial few days, even when
centralised relief efforts were still awaited,” Ranjan said. “However,
the local reserves of food are running out and people are increasingly
in need of support from the government.”
ActionAid says the government need to step up the relief operations.
“Only people huddled on the higher land have received any food or
relief, and those in the interiors of villages remain unreached,” said
Bhramarabara Jethi of Adventure, a local ActionAid partner working in
Puri district.
“With more rains expected the situation is likely to worsen. The
rescue and relief operation by the government needs to be stepped up,”
he added.
Government and aid agencies must pay special attention to the
needs of children and pregnant and lactating women, ActionAid said.
For more information about relief efforts and the floods in Orissa, visit ActionAid UK.