Flood situation remains grim in Orissa Print E-mail
Tuesday, 23 September 2008

Boudh (Orissa), Sept 23 (ANI): Flood situation in Orissa remained grim on Tuesday following heavy rains in the catchment area of Mahanadi River.

Large parts of the state were inundated after authorities were forced to open dozens of sluice gates of the Hirakud dam on the Mahanadi River.

The Mahanadi breached its banks at several places and floodwaters had swept away highways in some areas.

In Boudh District of Orissa, many villages like Kutasingha, Panimora, Kaleswar, Kumari, Bankapudi remained marooned today.

District authorities warned of more floods in the state's coastal belt once more water is released from the Hirakud dam on the Mahanadi.

"I haven't seen this kind of disaster for 28 years and I believe the state machinery is incapable to handle the situation here as it has decided to release more water from the Hirakund dam. If they had managed properly, things would not have taken this shape," said Rajani Kant Das, a flood victim.

However, authorities said the relief work is on and boats have been pressed into service for rescue work.

"Twelve thousand people in the block have been affected. We have 13 relief centers and 6678 people have been covered by relief, 7000 people have been provided with cooked food. Power boats and country boats have been put into service," said Mohan Prasad Mishra, the District Collector of Boudh.

Patil reviews flood situation in Orissa

New Delhi, Sept 23 (ANI): Union Home Minister Shivraj Patil undertook an aerial survey of flood affected areas of Orissa to day.

Union minister Chandra Shekhar, Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik, Leader of Opposition J B Patnaik, state Congress president Jaydev Jena and senior Home ministry officials accompanied Patil.

Patil also held a closed-door meeting with Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik and discussed the latest flood situation.

The delegation covered areas starting from the lower catchment areas of river Mahanadi up to the delta plains where large number of river branches presented a complex system of embankments and canal networks.

Meanwhile, the Navy has joined relief and rescue operations in the worst flood-hit Kendrapada district.

An additional 100-member National Disaster Rapid Action Force is now operating in the district. Four helicopters are engaged in air dropping in the marooned villages of Cuttack, Puri, Jagatsinghpur and Kendrapada District for the fourth day.

The death toll has gone upto 30 in the state.

In Uttar Pradesh, a high alert has been sounded in around 200 villages in five western districts of Saharanpur, Muzaffarnagar, Bagpat, Ghaziabad and Gautambuddha Nagar following a flood threat from Yamuna.

The threat of flood has been created in low-lying villages of these districts after 41,000 cusecs of water was discharged in Yamuna from Tajewala barrage in Haryana.

People have been evacuated to safer places. Vahicular trafic has been disrupted on Lucknow- Baharich - Gonda road in eastern UP. In several districts PAC has been deployed for relief and resue work.

Quoting official sources AIR correspondent reports that due to heavy rainfall and water release from different barrages rivers including Yamuna, Sharda, Ghagra and Saryu have swelled and crossed the danger level at several places in the state.
Railway tracks have been damaged at several places in Lakhimpur Kheri and Barabanki districts. Swelling rivers have also affected the lives in Faizabad, Sitapur, Agra and Mathra districts. (ANI)

Last Updated ( Tuesday, 23 September 2008 )
 
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In association with Regional Institute of Journalism and Mass Communication (RIJAM), Guwahati