2007 Bihar flood explained

Caption:Flooded north Bihar, India
2007 Bihar flood
Duration:August 2007
Fatalities:1,287

The 2007 Bihar flood occurred in August 2007 in the east Indian state of Bihar. It was described by the United Nations as the worst flood in the living memory of Bihar.[1] Although annual floods are common in Bihar,[2] heavier than usual rainfall during the monsoon season that year led to increasing water levels. By 3 August, the estimated death toll was 41 people, and 48 schoolgirls were marooned in a school in the Darbhanga district.[3] By 8 August, the flooding had impacted an estimated 10 million people in Bihar.[4] Army helicopters delivered food packets to residents, and 180 relief camps were established. By 10 August, aid workers in Bihar reported a dramatic increase in people with diarrhea[5] and by 11 August, flood-related deaths were still occurring.[6] The total number of deaths recorded in the 2007 Bihar floods was more than 1,300, the highest death toll in the state since the 1987 Bihar floods, in which more than 2,500 deaths were reported.[7]

Incident

The states of Bihar and Uttar Pradesh were the most affected due to their high population density. Nearly two million people, spread over eleven districts in Bihar, were affected by the floods. Many major rivers, including the Ganges, Punpun, Bagmati, Gandak, and Kosi, flowed above the danger mark.

Rainfall in July exceeded the monthly average over a 30-year period by a factor of five, leading to more than 40% of the state of Bihar being submerged. The town of Darbhanga and its surrounding areas were among the most severely affected locations in the state, and roads leading to other areas were rendered impassable by the flood. Many residents were forced to seek refuge on higher ground, while others were marooned and unable to access assistance.[8]

Affected areas

The flood affected 19 districts of the state. Some of the worst affected districts were Muzaffarpur, Sitamarhi, Saharsa, East Champaran, Supaul, Darbhanga, Patna, Bhagalpur, West Champaran, Katihar, Madhubani, Samastipur, Sheohar, Nalanda, Khagaria, Gopalganj, Madhepura, Araria, and Begusarai.[9]

Impact

At least 4,822 villages and 10,000,000 hectares of farm land were affected. About 29,000 houses were destroyed and 44,000 houses were damaged by the floods. Thousands of people were shifted to places of safety, including relief camps.[9]

Response

The United Nations described the flood as the worst to occur in the living memory of Bihar.[10]

Relief work

Assistance implemented

Grain (38,86,896 Qtls) distributed to affected families was around 50 lakhs. For emergency expenses (Rs 20/- per adult and Rs 15/- per child) that a person is entitled for, GoB had, till August 2008, paid Rs. 84.05 Crores against a demand of Rs. 1105 Crores made to the center. This was just about 8 per cent of the requirement.[11]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Floods: Helpless Bihar seeks PM's help.
  2. A CASE STUDY INTO THE BAGMATI FLOOD FORECASTING IN NORTH BIHAR, https://swat.tamu.edu/media/114999/f2_1_sharan.pdf
  3. News: North India inundated. Hindustan Times. 3 August 2007. 23 November 2008. https://web.archive.org/web/20080205020930/http://www.hindustantimes.com/storypage/storypage.aspx?id=350136a1-29a2-44bb-a354-ed2dda77a713&&Headline=North+India+inundated. 5 February 2008. dead. Last accessed 3 August 2007.
  4. News: Hunger, disease stalk children hit by South Asia floods . Reuters. 8 August 2007 . 2007-08-15.
  5. News: Bangladeshi hospital struggles to cope with flood victims . Reuters. 10 August 2007 . 2007-08-15.
  6. News: Flood victims clash with police in India, 30 hurt . Reuters. 11 August 2007 . 2007-08-15.
  7. Web site: Bihar's scary new flood.
  8. Jason Motlagh, "Floods devastate northern India state 20 million people affected and 4,000 die – officials blame onset of climate change", Chronicle Foreign Service, 5 October 2007, "Flooding has submerged more than 40 percent of Bihar, and Relief Commissioner R. Srivastava, citing government figures, said rainfall in July was five times higher than the monthly average over a 30-year span."
  9. Web site: Archived copy . 25 November 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080821122548/http://act-intl.org/news/dt_nr_2007/CASA_SITREP_EastIndiaFloods2007_090807.pdf . 21 August 2008 . dead .
  10. Web site: Indian . The Logical . 2015-11-10 . [Watch/Read] Displaced in 2007, Waiting for Compensation in 2015: A Bihar Story ]. 2023-09-17 . thelogicalindian.com . en.
  11. Mishra Dinesh Kumar, Bihar Floods of 2007– 1, EPW, 23 November 2007