With letup in rains, Kerala
focuses on cleanup, relief, rehabilitation
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| An aerial view of the floods in Kochi, in southern India's Kerala state. |
The onslaught of monsoon rains and floods since August 8 has
brought the state to its knees, in what is regarded as the worst floods since
1924.
By Robin Gomes
With a lull in the rains and no heavy downpours forecast in
the next 5 days, morale has surged in southern India’s Kerala state, boosting
the ongoing relief, rescue and cleanup operations. About 22,000
people were reported rescued on Sunday, after monsoon rains finally eased. No
red alert was issued for any of Kerala's rain-ravaged 14 districts.
Limping back to life
The Southern Railway has resumed a few
train services with speed regulations. The INS Garuda naval base in Kochi
opened to commercial flights for the first time in nearly 2 decades.
However, the adjacent main Kochi airport that had been shut down on August 15
due to flooded runways is still closed.
The onslaught of rains and floods since August 8 has brought
the state to its knees, in what is regarded as the worst floods since
1924. The disaster has claimed at least 230, with 13 more deaths reported
on Sunday. The number is likely to rise as waters recede and dead bodies are
found.
State chief minister Pinarayi Vijayan said
some 725,000 people have taken refuge in 5,645 relief camps across the
state. More than 360 people have been killed since the start of the
monsoon season in the state June.
Hindustan Times reported Vijayan as saying that 90% of the
rescue is over. But as rescuers, volunteers, relief supplies and
financial donations keep pouring in from various states, organizations and
individuals, including from abroad, Vijayan admitted that the path to recovery
and rehabilitation can be long and arduous.
Diseases
Anil Vasudevan, who handles disaster management at
the Kerala health department, told Reuters that authorities had isolated three
people with chickenpox in one of the relief camps in Aluva
town, nearly 250 km from state capital Thiruvananthapuram. He said
the department was preparing to deal with a possible outbreak of water-borne
and air-borne diseases in the relief camps.
Kerala’s health Minister KK Shailaja said
that their priority at the moment is health and sanitation. The
United Nations’ World Health Organisation (WHO) has sent a 13-member
team to Kerala, while India's health ministry has said it has set up medical
centres in many of the relief camps.
Rainfall in the state during the June-September monsoon
season has been more than 40 percent higher than normal, with torrential rains
since August 8 forcing authorities to release water from dozens of dangerously
full dams, sending surges into rivers that then overflowed their banks.
Essential goods and services
With waters receding, the National Crisis Management
Committee (NCMC) has urged that priority be given to providing
emergency supplies of food, water and medicines,
and restoring essential services such as power, fuel, telecom
and transport links.
Vijayan said there was no shortage of food in the state to
feed the flood-affected people, but the biggest challenge was transporting
food and relief material, as long stretches of several important highways
remin submerged.
In a review meeting on Sunday evening, the chief minister
instructed the officials to ensure that the relief also reaches thousands
of interstate migrant workers in the affected areas, many of
who lack shelter and food.
According to the union minister for tourism, KJ
Alphons, who is from Kerala, what the state urgently needs now is technical
assistance to re-start life. “There'll be no electricity in homes.
Carpentry, plumbing would be gone. We need hundreds of thousands of
electricians, plumbers, carpenters… We don't need clothes/food. People
with technical capabilities are required to put life back into Kerala,”
ANI quoted Alphons as saying.

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