In
Bihar's flood-prone villages, a cycle of misery is perpetuated.
In a month's time the monsoon will arrive. And I am reminded of my
visit to East Champaran district of Bihar four months after last year's
"exceptionally destructive" floods. As person after person narrated
his/her misery to me, it was clear that the government's relief was
inadequate and acute distress did not recede with the flood waters; it
lingered for months in the form of gnawing hunger, disease and
deprivation. In fact, it is a cycle of misery that repeats year after
year.
In the plains of north Bihar, drained by a network of 13 rivers,
monsoons are testing times.
Those were winter months when I visited 11 rural settlements in East
Champaran and the rabi crop was yet to be harvested. I must have spoken
to about 200 villagers and their common refrain was that it was a
near-crisis situation. Meera Devi of Semra village in Ramgarhwa
panchayat, Motihari block, said she did not have even a grain to offer
to God. Ambiya Khatun broke into sobs when we were discussing the food
situation in her village, Kathaan, in Motihari block. She and her
neighbours had neither food stocks nor regular employment. Deep in
debt, they could eat only on days they found some job.
Khatun's family was not even living in its house. Several houses in her
village had caved in or had been heavily damaged by floods. They were
living in ramshackle huts on the embankment, where they had sought
shelter at the time of floods, vulnerable to cold wave. "You are asking
us whether we have quilts or blankets.
The reality is that this year we do not even have pual (straw) to keep
us warm. Earlier, even the poor had some pual. But this year the entire
paddy crop was washed away by floods," said Maneshwari of Semra.
According to the government's own data, the floods of July-September
2007 in Bihar were exceptionally destructive. They affected 25 million
people in 22 villages, devastated crops on 1.6 million hectares and
destroyed over 700,000 houses.
The paltry government relief of a quintal of grain and Rs 200 per
family was quickly exhausted. Unemployment was common since until late
December no work had been taken up under the employment guarantee
scheme in the region. Heavy machinery was being used in road
construction. On the farms women got only Rs 25 for six hours of
work-half of what men got.
A number of cattle had perished in floods, while thousands continued to
die due to disease and fodder shortage. No compensation was provided
for the loss of farm animals. Compensation for crop loss too had not
reached several farmers months after the floods. Their misery was
compounded as they did not get ration under the below-poverty-line
category or Antyodaya scheme. For some time after floods even mid-day
meals were not available in schools and anganwadis.
The situation has improved a bit since then, but for how long? Houses
are being rebuilt, the employment guarantee scheme has been started and
harvesting is over.
But the bigger question remains: is Bihar better prepared for floods?
In the case of Sundarpur in Banjariya block, the very existence of the
village is threatened by river erosion, which has gobbled many fields
and houses. Its resident Sheikh Mirazul was forced to move his hut a
few metres away to protect it from the angry waters of the Burhi
Gandak. But he was still not sure whether his eight- member family was
safe even in the new house.
"This river has destroyed many. Fields have been ruined by erosion and
the sand deposited by river," Mirazul said. "To some extent the entire
village is threatened by erosion. Similar is the case of Ajgarwan,
Jatvaan, Khairi and Mohammadpur villages," added Habibullah,
Sundarpur's headman. Clearly, something more than better and speedier
relief is required. The state needs to review the situation in which,
on the one hand, "flood-protection" embankments are fast expanding, and
on the other hand, damage from floods is increasing even more rapidly.
It is well known that embankments for flood control have several
limitations, specially when constructed to control rivers which bring
heavy loads of silt. In fact, embankments are not so much a method of
flood control as they are a method of flood transfer. Walls can be
raised to protect a densely populated area, but then some other areas
where the damage is likely to be lesser will probably have to bear the
brunt of diverted floods. Even embankment-protected areas are not that
safe.
Breaches in embankments are becoming frequent. So is the uncontrolled
flow of water from the space left for controlled drainage. Two months
from now the Burhi Gandak will be angry again. Bihar still has time to
escape its wrath. But will it?
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Central
Chronicle 2007.