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Assam flood situation improves as rains let up
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SME Times News Bureau | 29 Jul, 2020
The overall flood situation in
Assam further improved on Tuesday, even as one more person died in
Golaghat district, taking the death toll to 104, officials said.
Officials
of the India Meteorological Department (IMD) said that with the respite
in the monsoon rains, the situation would improve further in the coming
days.
According to the officials of Assam State Disaster
Management Authority (ASDMA), 20 lakh people in 1,771 villages across 21
of the state's 33 districts still remained distressed, though the
number has dropped since Friday when over 28 lakh people in 2,543
villages of 26 districts were affected.
A total of 103,609 hectares of crops are still flooded, but the area has come down from 122,573 hectares as on July 24.
ASDMA
officials said that four major rivers flowing down from neighbouring
Arunachal Pradesh and Meghalaya, including the Brahmaputra, are in a
state of spate in six districts.
Forest officials also said that
at least 137 wild animals have died due to the floods and 163 have been
rescued, even as over 75 per cent of the 884 sq km Kaziranga National
Park remains inundated. The animals that have died in the annual monsoon
flood include 14 rhinos, 101 hog deer, ten wild boars, five wild
buffaloes, three porcupines and two swamp deer.
The officials
said that besides Kaziranga, located on edge of the eastern Himalayan
biodiversity hotspots of Golaghat and Nagaon districts, the Manas, R.G.
Orang and Tinsukia national parks, and the Pabitora and Tinsukia
wildlife sanctuaries were also affected and many wild animals have
perished.
ASDMA officials said that of the affected people,
three-fourths, or 15 lakh, are in the state's five western districts --
Goalpara (444,842), Barpeta (306,778), Morigaon (271,763), Dhubri
(222,868) and South Salmara (249,423).
In the over month long
flood, at least 104 persons, including women and children have died so
far in 22 districts, while 26 others were killed in landslides since May
22.
The Brahmaputra river has been flowing above the danger in
many places in Jorhat, Dhubri, Goalpara and Sonitpur and three other
major rivers -- Dhansiri, Jia Bharali and Kopili -- are flowing above
the danger mark in many places in three districts.
The district
administrations have set up around 400 relief camps and distribution
centres in 21 districts, where around 42,300 flood-hit people have
sheltered.
Besides erosion of river banks at a large number of
places, roads, embankments, bridges, culverts and other infrastructure
were damaged at many locations in 21 districts, the officials said,
adding that hundreds of houses were fully or partially damaged due to
the floods.
A total of 16 National Disaster Response Force (NDRF)
teams and many teams of the State Disaster Response Force, along with
the district and local administration, are working to rescue the
affected people and render relief services, including distribution of
necessary materials to the marooned villagers.
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