Indonesia

India bans building along rivers in flood-hit north

Agence France-Presse

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Construction along river banks will be banned in a devastated north Indian state amid concerns unchecked development fueled last month's flash floods and landslides that killed thousands

DISASTER ZONE. A photograph made available on 25 June 2013 showing a general view of the Kedarnath Veally in Uttrakhand after the flash flood on 22 June 2013. EPA/STR

DEHRADUN, India – Construction along river banks will be banned in a devastated north Indian state amid concerns unchecked development fueled last month’s flash floods and landslides that killed thousands, the state’s top official said Monday, July 1.

The Chief Minister of Uttarakhand, Vijay Bahuguna, also announced that a regulatory body would be set up to scrutinize future construction as the Himalayan state begins the herculean task of rebuilding following the June 15 floods.

“Permission will not be given for any kind of construction along the river banks,” Bahuguna told reporters in the state capital Dehradun.

“All guidelines will be strictly followed,” he added.

Raging rivers and landslides from torrential rains swept away houses, other buildings and even entire villages in the state known as the “Land of the Gods” for its revered shrines and pilgrimage sites.

Some 1,000 people died in the disaster and more than 3,000 are still missing, Bahuguna said on Sunday, June 30, while conceding that the exact death toll may never be known.

A state lawmaker has said the number killed could cross 10,000, as more bodies were recovered from under tons of debris and from rivers downstream, but this figure was rejected as “guesswork” by Bahuguna.

Thousands of soldiers, backed by military helicopters, have wound down rescue efforts after evacuating more than 100,000 people stranded when roads and bridges were destroyed.

Environmentalists and aid agencies have said rapid and unregulated development and deforestation was partly to blame for the floods in the state, which attracts thousands of pilgrims and other tourists every year.

Bahuguna announced that the Uttarakhand Reconstruction and Rehabilitation Authority would be established to spell out guidelines for all development activities in the state, keeping in mind the welfare of its residents for “the next 100 years”.

International charity ActionAid said construction of hydroelectric dams and mining projects over the last decade in the state’s many valleys threatened its fragile ecosystem.

“This aggressive and unregulated construction work has been playing ecological havoc for years,” said Debabrat Patra, ActionAid’s regional manager for Uttarakhand.

“With little forest left to hold the earth, another burst of heavy rain could be disastrous for the people living there,” he said in a statement.

Top industry body ASSOCHAM said it was time authorities woke up to the huge losses incurred every year from floods as a result of the development of flood plains throughout the country.

“Encroachments into the flood plains over the years have aggravated the problem,” it said in a news release.

“While we cannot do much about the natural phenomenon, we have to ensure that the nation remains always prepared for meeting any eventuality that can cause avoidable loss to human lives,” ASSOCHAM said. – Rappler.com

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