For the millions
trapped by flood waters, there is no lifeline in sight.
Floods bring out the worst in us.
They might occur elsewhere in Asia,
Africa and even in Europe, but when they happen here, as they
invariably do every year, floods turn into the quintessential Indian
phenomenon: a blame game involving (angry) politicians across regions
and parties, (defensive) bureaucrats, (largely absent) engineers and
somewhat self-righteous civil society organisations with disparate
agendas. Then there is talk of building high dams in neighbouring
countries to contain turbulent rivers, however impractical or
ecologically unsound the proposals might be. And, finally, the spectre
of a decades-old project to link India's rivers rises once again to
complete the circle of helplessness and hopelessness.
India's river sutra for dealing with floods is a wily mixture of
politics, commerce and barely disguised ignorance of matters technical
combined with a remarkable indifference to the sufferings of the
victims. The millions displaced by the swirling waters close to
five
million in Bihar and Assam this year provide but spectacle and a
fleeting focus for the excuses and allegations that are churned up
every time our volatile rivers burst their embankments and devastate
increasingly larger swathes of the country.
Although natural calamities are occurring more frequently and striking
with greater force thanks to climate change, there is a remarkable
consistency in the way officialdom responds to disasters. Each time a
flood touches the political danger mark, prime ministers, chief
ministers and party leaders hop into planes for aerial surveys of the
affected areas. Ask anyone who is familiar with rivers and they will
tell you that there is nothing much you can glean from this height.
Even in normal times, a river is nothing but a sheet of water which
hides all that has gone before it.
Part of the politics of flood management is the dole from Delhi, the
largesse depending entirely on the political calculations of the ruling
party at the Centre. Figures of the people and livestock affected along
with those relating to the area of submergence, both of which have a
bearing on final tally of losses, have nothing to do with the amount of
relief that is announced since most statistics appear to be a matter of
guesswork. In 2004, the Central Water Commission had claimed the land
submerged in north Bihar was more than the total area of these
districts! It was a discrepancy that neither the Ministry of Water
Resources nor the PMO spotted when the state government used the same
figures to seek relief.
This time Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has been unusually quick to
grant a Rs 1,000-crore package for Bihar although this has triggered a
political sideshow in his "home state" of Assam Singh is a Rajya
Sabha member from Dispur which believes its misery is being
belittled. Stoking the controversy is the call to MPs by Lok Sabha
Speaker Somnath Chatterjee and Rajya Sabha Chairman Hamid Ansari to
contribute Rs 10 lakh each from their Local Area Development Scheme
funds for reconstruction projects in Bihar. Should Assam have been left
out?
Relief, timely or not, has tended to dominate the discourse on floods
in times of crisis but even at other times the core issue of river
management through long-term measures has seldom been a priority. The
standard response so far has been to set up a committee or task force
to study the problem although there are enough reports with the
government to erect a substantial barrage across the Kosi. In 2004,
Manmohan Singh, who is chairman of the National Disaster Management
Authority, announced a task force to look into the problem of recurrent
floods of the past 50 years. "We need to find an abiding solution to
this problem of upstream solutions in the catchment areas and
downstream solutions in the form of flood control measure," Singh
declared in July 2004, when the state was in the grip of another of its
"worst-ever" floods. The task force was to submit its report in six
months. No one has seen its recommendations yet.
Abiding solutions may prove elusive specially since we share rivers
with neighbours. Take the Brahmaputra. At 2,906 km, it is one of Asia's
longest rivers, traversing China's Tibet region, India and Bangladesh
before joining the Ganga. Every year, the river washes away countless
villages and submerges vast tracts of farmlands besides causing
considerable loss of human and animal life. Traditional approaches to
"taming" the river do not work and policy-makers have to understand the
ground realities before coming up with solutions.
Or look at the Kosi, undoubtedly one of the world's most volatile
rivers. Before embankments were taken up in earnest and became a tool
of political patronage, the flood-prone area of Bihar was just 2.5
million hectares. By 1974, the Kosi had 2,192 km of embankments while
the area vulnerable to floods has shot up to 4.3 million hectares.
Today, the state has embankments stretching for 3,430 km and a sharp
rise in the flood-prone area to 6.88 million hectares. Since
embankments are obviously not the solution, another task force has been
appointed to look at Bihar's woes. That, however, will not stop much
money and sand flowing down the Kosi as embankments are repaired
periodically.
Meanwhile, a proposal made in 1937 to dam the Kosi at Barahkshetra in
Nepal and revived periodically since then is being taken out of
mothballs. This promises to take its own time even for talks to be
initiated with Nepal. For the millions trapped by flood waters, there
is no lifeline in sight.
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