Villages inundated in Haryana as Yamuna overflows banks (Second Lead)

By IANS
Friday, September 10, 2010

CHANDIGARH - Fresh breaches in the embankments of the Yamuna river emerged in various places in Haryana’s Panipat, Sonepat and Karnal districts, flooding almost 30 villages and damaging national highways passing through the affected areas, officials said Friday.

Besides, hundreds of acres of agricultural land was inundated in these three districts as well as low-lying areas of Jhajjar, Rohtak and Bhiwani districts, a revenue department official said.

According to an official, a couple of breaches, of around 80 to 100 feet, emerged in the Yamuna embankment near Sanauli village and Pathargarh village of Panipat.

“Flood waters have entered nearly 12 villages of Panipat district. We have evacuated several victims to nearby safe locations and our rescue work is on at a war-footing,” a spokesperson of the Panipat administration told IANS.

Sources said four teenaged boys were swept away in the fast currents of the Yamuna in the district. Two boys were saved by rescue teams while a search for the other two boys is still on.

Besides, fresh breaches also emerged at various places in Sonepat district and flood waters submerged at least six low-lying villages and inundated acres of agriculture land.

Sonepat Deputy Commissioner Ajit Joshi said: “The Yamuna is flowing at threatening levels. It is posing a threat to the adjacent villages. We have identified various sensitive points and placed sand-bags there.”

Overflowing Yamuna water also entered Karnal district, submerging 12 villages.

“Yamuna water is expected to reach Faridabad district Friday night. A team of the National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) has been requisitioned as a precautionary measure. Fearing heavy floods, administration of Palwal district has evacuated two villages, Indra Nagar and Mobali Pur,” a spokesperson of the revenue department said.

“Due to heavy rainfall, flooding of agricultural fields has taken place in several villages in low-lying areas of Jhajjar, Rohtak and Bhiwani districts,” he said.

As per government officials, over 100 villages of Punjab and Haryana were flooded and thousands of acres of farm land inundated as the Yamuna, Satluj and other rivers rose to alarming levels.

The rainfall over the past few days in the region and in the upper reaches of Himachal Pradesh and Uttrakhand caused overflowing of the Satluj, Yamuna, Markanda and Tangri and other rivers.

Over 60 villages in Haryana’s Yamunanagar district were flooded Thursday.

“Flood waters have also damaged national highways. This has badly hit road traffic,” Yamunanagar Deputy Commissioner Ashok Sanghwan told IANS.

“The administration has made all safety arrangements. We have observed that the water level has started receding slightly in the Yamuna river. Now, it depends on the intensity of rains in the coming days,” Sanghwan said.

Besides, flood waters also entered some villages in Ambala.

Ambala deputy commissioner Samir Pal Saro advised people to avoid going near the Tangri and Markanda rivers as it could prove dangerous.

In Punjab, the Satluj river entered over a dozen villages in Anandpur Sahib sub-division of Ropar district. Flood waters entered these villages through a breach in the embankment near Lodhipur village.

This breach emerged around a month back but the Ropar administration had failed to plug it. The most affected villages were Dasgrain, Burj, Mehndli Kalan, Lodhipur and Baddal.

The Bhakra Beas Management Board (BBMB) also released over 30,000 cusecs of water into the Satluj Thursday to maintain the maximum level of 1,680 feet in the Bhakra Dam reservoir.

Water lever at the Bhakra Dam reached 1680.90 feet Thursday and the inflow was around 40,000 cusecs.

However, a BBMB official said there was no threat of flood in the region.

“Release of water from the Bhakra reservoir is a routine exercise and so far there is no threat of floods. Everything is under control and we should not create panic about this,” BBMB joint director V.P. Sharma told IANS.

Filed under: Environment

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