People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXVIII
No. 30 July 25, 2004 |
ASSAM FLOODS
CPI(M) Asks PM To Ensure Speedy Relief
THE
CPI(M) Assam state committee has requested the prime minister Dr Manmohan Singh
to ensure that all possible assistance is rendered for undertaking relief and
rehabilitation work in the flood ravaged state. Stressing there was an impending
danger of famine like situation in the state, the CPI(M) urged him to initiate
immediately both short term and long term measures for seeking a permanent
solution to the problems of perennial floods in Assam.
A
three member delegation of CPI(M) leaders comprising Party state secretary,
Heman Das, former CPI(M) MP, Uddhab Barman, and state committee member, Isfaqur
Rahman, met the prime minister at Guwahati on July 20 and presented a memorandum
on the devastating flood situation in the state. Dr Singh accompanied by two
other central ministers from Assam, was visiting the state on a daylong
stock-taking mission on the devastation caused by floods.
The Assam state committee of the CPI(M) while telling the prime minister that the relief being provided so far to the people is woefully inadequate, it put forward 10 specific demands to the prime minister in their memorandum (see box).
The memorandum also detailed the grim situation in the state following the ravage of the floods. More than 1crore people of the state are badly affected by floods and erosions while the official bulletin stated that around 90 lakh people in 26 districts of the state were affected. The death toll has been put at 68 while the actual number will be much higher. In the capital city of Guwahati alone, landslides killed more than 15 people in the early hours of July 15. Lakhs of people have been rendered homeless and around 21 lakh hectares of land, including 6 lakh hectares of cropland, has been submerged. Property worth crores of rupees has been damaged. The road and rail network has also been extensively damaged. The current wave of floods and erosions have destroyed agriculture, the backbone of Assam’s economy.
The
memorandum stated that rescue operations are being hamstrung by inaccessibility
to the affected areas and non-availability of mechanised boasts. On the other
hand, relief camps are packed beyond capacity and are unable to accommodate
lakhs of people who were rendered homeless. Such people continue to wage a grim
battle against hunger and water borne diseases in the relief camps, makeshift
shelters and marooned areas. Thousands and thousands of people are still
languishing without food, medicines, safe drinking water, baby foods, fodder for
livestock etc. The threat of epidemic was also looming large over the affected
areas. The biggest worry now is the post-flood situation when there is every
possibility of diarrhea and other water-borne diseases breaking out on a large
scale. Prices of essential commodities are also soaring high due to the
artificial shortage created by unscrupulous traders. (INN)