Srinagar: As historical records confirm that the recent floods in Kashmir have been worse than the worst ever — that in 1893 — the human suffering and devastation caused have few parallels in the Valley’s recent history.
Walter Lawrence, who documented the 1893 floods in his famous book, “The Vale of Kashmir”, says the water level in the Jhelum river in Srinagar reached 27 feet. The water level in the river that divides Srinagar city into two parts crossed 30 feet at Ram Munshi Bagh on Seppetember 7.
While Lawrence says the areas on the left bank of the Jhelum were part of the city’s flood basin in 1893, today it has densely-populated residential and commercial areas of Rajbagh, Jawahar Nagar, Gogjibagh, Wazirbagh, Natipora, Chanapora, Barzalla, Santnagar, Rawalpora, Peerbagh, Bemina, Qamarwari and a dozen others.
The flood waters that hit the Valley like a tsunami during the intervening night of September 6-7, inundated all these areas. While the present population of the city is 1.45 million, over 600,000 people lived in the inundated areas.
The army immediately swung into action while personnel of the Indian Air Force and the NDRF came in a day later on September 8.
The state administration, as Chief Minister Omar Abdullah admitted, “was washed away by the floods” which had never in the past ravaged the capital city so brutally. More than 200,000 have been rescued from the inundated residential areas but officials say over 100,000 are still trapped in their homes.
Most of them now refuse to come out after reports of looting and burglaries in the areas where residents abandoned all their belongings during rescue operations to save their lives.
In relief camps and inundated areas, supplies of essentials of life, including medicines, are a major problem faced by the state and the central governments.
The complete collapse of road and telecom connectivity has created a situation where rumour-mongers and anti-social elements are adding to the miseries of the flood victims and the administration which is trying to help the suffering masses.
Relief material has been pouring over from different parts of the Valley into Srinagar, where volunteers and senior citizens are helping to ensure that it reaches the right quarters.
The authorities have confirmed only 29 deaths in the Valley but, given the number of missing people, the death toll is feared to rise after the submerged areas are drained.
IANS