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500,000 homeless, without food and water, in Assam floods PDF Print E-mail

08 Jul 2009 17:17:25 GMT
Source: ActionAid

Heavy monsoon rains have been falling on the Indian state of Assam and
neighbouring states for several days, causing floods which have now
forced 500,000 people from their homes.

The Brahmaputra river has breached embankments in a number of places. A
100-metre section of the recently reconstructed, state-of-the-art
Matmora embankment was washed away on 30 June. Water has been pouring
into towns and villages.

ActionAid staff have carried out an assessment in Lakhimpur district
where 98,000 people have been affected by the floods. They found people
sheltering in schools and in makeshift camps on the Matmora and
Moderguri embankments. Flood water has entered most schools and colleges
and they are no longer safe to use as shelters. Families on the
embankments have made temporary shelters from tarpaulin or galvanised
iron sheets, but in the continuous heavy rain these makeshift shelters
are inadequate.

There is no drinking water and no toilets. Many families have no
containers for collecting water even if they could find it.

The ActionAid assessment team said that there is an immediate need for
food, drinking water or purifying agents, animal fodder, tarpaulins,
safe water storage vessels, hygiene kits, temporary toilets and mosquito
nets.

Swapan, a programme officer in ActionAid’s Guwahati office, said:
“Floods in Assam are an annual affair. Yet the government’s rescue and
relief operations are not geared up to reach people in time, resulting
in huge losses of property and livestock in addition to loss of human
lives.”



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