6.7 lakh hit by floods in Assam; IAF rescues 13 fishermen
At least 13 major rivers, including the Brahmaputra, are flowing above the danger level at different places, with alert for heavy to very heavy rainfall in several districts
PTI
-
Elephants being shifted to highlands of Pobitora Wildlife Sanctuary after a major part of the sanctuary submerged in floods, in Morigaon district of Assam on Tuesday. PHOTO: PTI
Guwahati, 2 July
Assam's flood situation remained
critical on Tuesday with over 6.71 lakh people affected in 20 districts in the
second wave of flooding this year, as the Indian Air Force (IAF) rescued 13
stranded fishermen from the severely-hit Dibrugarh district, an official said.
At least 13 major rivers, including
the Brahmaputra, are flowing above the danger level at different places, with
alert for heavy to very heavy rainfall in several districts, an official
bulletin said. The stranded fishermen were rescued from Hatia Ali, a 'char'
(sandbar) area in Dibrugarh, at the request of Assam State Disaster Management
Authority (ASDMA).
"ASDMA requested IAF to
airlift these 13 stranded fishermen. All the expenditure for airlifting the
people will be borne by ASDMA," the official said.
The IAF, sharing pictures related
to the rescue operation on X, wrote: "#IAF rescued 13 marooned survivors
from a small island in the flooded Brahmaputra, north of Dibrugarh in Assam. On
2 Jul 24, after a sunrise takeoff, a Mi-17 IV helicopter from AFS Mohanbari
flew in challenging weather conditions and undertook rescue ops from a marshy
piece of land."
The coordinated efforts of the
pilot and flight gunner ensured prompt and safe boarding of the 13 survivors,
it said.
The IAF added that emergency first
aid was provided by the force after the rescue.
On Sunday, the IAF had rescued 8
State Disaster Response Force (SDRF) personnel and a revenue official from
Jonai in Dhemaji district when they were stranded in another sandbar area
during relief operations.
Dibrugarh district has been
severely affected in the current wave with the major town in Upper Assam
inundated for the sixth consecutive day.
An ASDMA bulletin said that
6,71,167 people were reeling under flood waters in 67 revenue circles in 20
districts - Biswanath, Cachar, Charaideo, Darrang, Chirang, Dhemaji, Dibrugarh,
Golaghat, Jorhat, Kamrup, Lakhimpur, Sivasagar, Sonitpur, Morigaon, Nagaon,
Majuli, Karimganj, Tamulpur, Tinsukia and Nalbari.
With one fatality confirmed in the
last 24 hours, the death toll in this year's flood, storm and landslide rose to
46.
The Brahmaputra is flowing over the
red mark at Neamatighat (Jorhat), Tezpur (Sonitpur), Guwahati (Kamrup) and
Dhubri (Dhubri). Other major rivers that have breached the danger level are
Subansiri at Badatighat (Lakhimpur), Burhidihing at Chenimari (Dibrugarh),
Dikhou at Sivasagar, Disang at Nanglamuraghat (Sivasagar), Dhansiri at
Numakigarh (Golaghat), Jia-Bharali at NT Road Crossing (Sonitpur), Kopili at
Kampur (Nagaon), Puthimari at NH Road Crossing (Kamrup), Beki at Barpeta Road
Bridge, Dhaleswari at (Hailakandi), Kushiyara at Karimganj, and Barak river at
BP Ghat.
The ASDMA bulletin said the
Regional Meteorological Centre at Borjhar, Guwahati, has issued an alert for
likely heavy to very heavy rain at isolated places over Goalpara, Bongaigaon,
Karbi Anglong and Dima Hasao.
Altogether 8,142 people are taking
shelter in 72 relief camps in different affected districts. For relief and
rescue operations, NDRF teams have been deployed at Cachar, Barpeta,
Bongaigaon, Dibrugarh, Jorhat, Golaghat, Majuli and Lakhimpur.
SDRF, fire and emergency services
personnel, police forces and AAPDA Mitra Volunteers of ASDMA have been helping
the district administration in flood affected areas. Indian Army personnel have
also been pressed into relief operations in Golaghat district.
A total of 614 SDRF personnel,
including 159 deep divers, with 295 boats have also been deployed in 54
locations.
Breach of embankments in Golaghat,
Jorhat, Nagaon and Majuli have been reported in the last 24 hours.
Reports of damage to other
infrastructure, like roads, have also been received, the ASDMA bulletin added. In
the famed Kaziranga National Park, 95 out of the 233 forest camps have been
inundated with the Golaghat district administration issuing prohibitory orders
under Section 163 of the Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita (BNSS) restricting
the movement of vehicular traffic on NH-37 (New NH-715) and vehicle speed to
between 20 to 40 km/hour.
Leave a Reply
Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *