Home India News Flood waters enter over 1,000 Bihar villages

Flood waters enter over 1,000 Bihar villages

By IANS,

Patna : Flood water has entered over 1,000 villages in Bihar, forcing people to abandon their homes, even as rising water level of most rivers was posing a threat to many other villages, officials said Saturday.

All the inundated villages are in flood-prone districts of Bhagalpur, Muzaffarpur, Gopalganj, Araria, Purnia, Saharsa, Darbhanga, Madhepura and Bagaha, officials said.

“Flood waters entered more than 700 villages of Aurai block in Muzaffarpur. In Bhagalpur, more than 200 villages were inundated, while dozens of villages were flooded in Madhepura, Araria and Purnia,” an official of the state disaster management department said.

A water resource department official said: “Water entered these villages after levels rose in all the major rivers following heavy rains in the state and the catchment areas of Nepal.”

According to the Central Water Commission, the water level in Ganges crossed the red mark at several places. Similarly, the Kosi was flowing above the danger mark and Mahananda at other places.

An official said that standing crops worth crores of rupees have been damaged and road communication at several places has been snapped. “Paddy cultivation has been badly hit… standing banana and maize crops in Bhagalpur and other districts have been destroyed,” he said.

Officials said that after two consecutive years of drought, the fear of a major flood was back in Bihar with incessant rains and heavy water discharge into the Kosi river from Nepal.

However, Bihar Water Resources Development Minister Vijay Kumar Choudhary said all embankments were safe and there was no need to panic.

However, in view of worsening flood situation, five teams of the National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) have been deployed in five flood-hit districts.

Reports suggests that hundreds of people have been asked to shift to safer areas by the authorities.

The state government has asked engineers and district officials to keep a 24-hour vigil.

Choudhary said the eastern Kosi embankment, which had breached in 2008, flooding five districts of northern Bihar, was totally safe. “We are taking care of it. There is no need to panic.”

In 2008, over three million people were rendered homeless in Bihar when the Kosi river breached its bank upstream in Nepal and changed course. It was said to be the worst flood in the state in the last 50 years.