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Odisha steps up relief efforts

Published: 16 Oct 2013 - 01:08 am | Last Updated: 29 Jan 2022 - 08:59 pm


Women carry an injured calf they rescued from a damaged house in Ganjam district, Odisha, yesterday.

Bhubaneswar: Odisha yesterday intensified relief efforts in the flood-affected areas after the water has started receding, an official said.

“We have intensified relief efforts in the affected areas as the flood water has started receding”, state special relief commissioner Pradeep Mohapatra said.

Air dropping of food packets has also been stopped, as all the affected places are now approachable by roads or boats, he said. “We have so far evacuated about 112,000 people. We do not think any further evacuation is required,” he added.

Heavy rain brought by Cyclone Phailin that hit the state coast Saturday night triggered floods in Balasore, Mayurbhanj, Jajpur and Bhadrak districts.

More than one million people were affected when the water of major rivers and their tributaries in the region submerged low-lying areas and swamped homes.

Mohapatra said except some places of Balasore district, situation has improved.

Although the government said evacuation was not required, television channels showed footage of people stranded on house tops and high-rise embankments.

A volunteer of a nongovernmental organisation, who is engaged in relief work, said large numbers of victims were still waiting for help.

In some areas of Balasore, the situation is grim because the water level in Subarnarekha river was rising after heavy rain in the upper catchment area, revenue divisional commissioner Arabinda Kumar Padhee who is supervising the relief and rescue operation in the area said. He said more places would submerge if the river’s water level rose further. The army, the National Disaster Response Force, Odisha Disaster Response Force and the state police are continuing relief operation in the affected areas, he said.

The very severe tropical cyclone in the Bay of Bengal which struck Saturday night near Gopalpur in Ganjam district has left a trail of destruction in the coastal districts of the state.

The worst-hit districts are Ganjam, Puri, Khordha and Gajapati.

Although damage to properties was estimated at many millions of rupees, the loss of humans was minimal compared to the 1999 super cyclone that claimed over 10,000 lives.

IANS