Sri. Dinesh Kumar Mishra on the flooding of Kosi basin,2008

Shri Dinesh Kumar Mishra of Barh Mukti Abhiyan has been campaigning on the flood issues for a long term. Following is a note from him on the historical context of flooding in the Kosi basin
3 Sep 2008
0 mins read

Dr. Jagannath Mishra, former Chief Minister of Bihar, has given a pathetic description of floods in Bihar. He said that "Nobody from the government has gone to Saharsa so far. If the people in Saharsa are surviving, they must be saying that we are engulfed in water since ten days and nobody is there to think about us. This is quite worrisome. I will suggest that we must try to look after those surviving there. We must try to save them, whether by boats or a helicopter.. The flood in Saharsa is not a flood, this is unprecedented¦.we cannot call it a flood, it is a deluge." But wait, he is not talking about the recent floods (2008) in Bihar. He was making a speech in the Bihar Vidhan Sabha on the 13th September 1984 about a similar incident that took place on the 5th September 1984 near Navhatta in Saharsa district of north Bihar when the Kosi had breached its embankment at 75th kilometer south of the much talked about Bhimnagar Barrage and come out of the jacket just as it happened at Kusaha this year. Obviously, the powers that be refuse to take any lessons from the past mistakes and their executive wing, the Water Resources Department, is immune to any criticism and learning. The 1984 incident had uprooted nearly half a million people from their homes and hearths and engulfed 96 villages spread over 7 blocks of Saharsa and Supaul districts then. They could return to their homes only after the Holi festival in March 1985.

The Kosi embankment (locally called as the eastern afflux bundh was breached near the Kusaha village in Nepal turning four Panchayats of Nepal into a watery grave. These Panchayats are Western Kusaha, Sripur, Haripur and Laukahi with a population of nearly 35,000. Counting continues about the number of villages trapped in floodwaters in Bihar. Supaul, Saharsa, Araria, Purnea, Katihar, and Khagaria had to bear the brunt of the unexpected floods. According to official sources nearly 35 lakh people have been hit by the floods in these districts. Nearly 3 lakh people have been evacuated from the engulfed areas. Relief operations are reported to be picking up for the survivors and so are the rescue operations. Unless marooned people are accessed, relief operations carry little meaning. The relief that is reaching the people is not adequate as they were braving the floods for about a fortnight without any external assistance. The blame game and mud slinging that is so common to such accidents are also going on in full swing. Many leaders of opposition have blamed the Govt. of Bihar for the breach while the GoB and its ministers are calling the breach a natural calamity and that the river is now trying to go to the east. It must be mentioned here that that the Kosi embankments have breached thrice on its western side and each time it was suggested that the river is trying to the west. The Kosi embankments were built in late 1950s and according to the agreement with Nepal, the responsibility of maintaining these embankments was vested in GoB. Let us glance through the earlier breaches in the Kosi embankment. The inaugural breach had to be faced on the western embankment in Nepal in 1963 near the village Dalwa. Binodanand Jha of the Congress Party was the chief minister and the responsibility of the breach was passed on to rats and foxes that dig holes in the body of the embankments through which water seeps and the embankment fails. The other reason for the failure was given that because of the bad road conditions, the boulders could not be reached to the site. In this connection, a meeting of the Irrigation Minister of Bihar, Dip Narayan Singh, the Panchayat Minister of Nepal, Kharag Bahadur Singh and the Irrigation Minister of Nepal, Dr. Nageshwar Prasad Singh was held at the Kosi Project headquarters at Birpur on August 22, 1963. The Nepalese side offered to extend all cooperation in undertaking any long term programme to tame the Kosi. They also indicated that should a need arise for rehabilitation of the people in a similar situation, then its responsibility should be taken by the Government of India. Then came the breach of 1968 at five places in Jamalpur (Darbhanga). This was caused due to the highest flow of 913,000 cusecs ever recorded in the river but an enquiry held by the Chief Engineer , Floods of CWC, P N Kumra revealed that the failure was once again caused by the rats and foxes. The state was under the President's Rule then. The residents of eight villages in the Basantpur block of Supaul district had refused to be relocated outside the Kosi embankment and demanded instead a ring bundh for them and the eastern Kosi embankment formed a part of this ring. The Bhatania Approach Bundh that was constructed in 1968-69, collapsed between 10th to 19th kilometer below Bhimnagar in 1971 and many villages were washed away but eastern embankment had not breached. The Approach Bundh was constructed at a cost of Rs. 3.17 lakhs but the repair cost of the same was to the tune of Rs. 2.87cr.The state was under the Chief Minister ship of Bhola Paswan Shastri of Sanyukt Vidhayak Dal. Since the damage was done only to eight villages, the incident did not get wide publicity. The next incident occurred in 1980 near Bahuarawa on the eastern embankment in Salkhua block of Saharsa district near 121st kilometer below Bhimnagar. The river eroded the embankment in about 2 kilometers reach but just after eroding, it receded very fast and did not spill on to the countryside. The state was ruled by Dr Jagannath Mishra of Congress Party then. In 1984, a tragedy as bad as Jamalpur struck the eastern embankment near Hempur village in the Navhatta block of Saharsa district, 75 kilometer below the Bhimnagar barrage. It had uprooted half a million people and had engulfed 96 villages in 7 blocks of Saharsa and Supaul districts. People could go back to their villages only after the Holi festival of 1985 when the breach got plugged. The breach was repaired at a cost of Rs. 8.2cr. Bindeshwari Dubey of Congress Party was the Chief Minister. In 1991, there was a breach in the western embankment near Joginia in Nepal that led to a political crisis in Bihar and the Water Resources Minister of the state had to resign his post. This resignation was never accepted by Lalu Prasad Yadav who was the Chief Minister of the state then. This was a repeat performance of Bahuarawa breach where the river had receded after eroding the embankment. The repair of the embankment costed Rs 5.17cr and a compensation of Rs. 19.80 lakh had to be paid to Nepal for temporary acquisition of the land and trees etc. And the Kusaha breach took place in the regime of Nitish Kumar and it will take about a year to get the complete story. Thus, virtually no party including the President's Rule can claim that it was not involved in such an accident. Yet, the blame game and mud slinging continues unabated. There is no history of these breaches being plugged before March next year. The practicality of embanking of a heavily silt carrying river is that the embankments would breach at regular intervals as we have seen so far that the river has breached its embankment 8 times in a span of just 50 years. The government will keep on raising and strengthening these embankments and they would retaliate in a more ferocious way. This will happen irrespective of which party is ruling the state and also in full presence of administration, officials of the water resources department and the police. An interesting argument is given by the engineers and politicians after blaming Nepal and Nepali people of non-cooperation that the river has changed its course and it now wants to move to east. If that is true, why on earth the embankments were constructed along the river? Were they not meant to prevent the river from moving either east or west? How did the Water Resources Department know that the river wanted to change its course? Why did it help the river accomplishing its objectives? All this can happen in our country because there is no accountability at any level. Remember the World Commissioned of Dams Report (2000) which was rubbished by Government of India and it laid too much of emphasis on accountability as one of its primary tools. All this bickering notwithstanding, the people of Bihar need help from outside. Be it Governmental or otherwise. For those who have lost everything that they possessed, the life will have to start from scratch. We used to suggest earlier that people should get compensation instead of relief but will say this year that they should not only get compensation but relief also. This could be any kind to rehabilitate them back in their life. The worst is yet to come when the water would recede and the people will get to know how much of their land is sand cast, how much has gone under waterlogging. That is the time they will come to know that the Kharif is already lost and the chances of Rabi also may not be there as moisture of the land will not allow for ploughing operations and without ploughing no agriculture will be possible. The order is going to be tall. Kosi floods this year have been disastrous and no explanation whatsoever would satisfy the hapless victim of the tragedy that will be remembered for a long time to come. One is reminded of a statement of Karpoori Thakur, a former Chief Minister of Bihar, in Bihar Vidhan Sabha during the zero hour, "I am pained to say that after reminding the officers time and again, this small repair work of the embankment was not done. The result is that the embankment has breached between 75 to 78 km and almost all of Saharsa district is under a sheet of water. The situation is horrifying there and the district administration or the engineers of the Irrigation Department have not done what they should have done in the situation. Rome was burning and Nero was playing his flute and this is what this Government is doing." This again was a statement on the 10th September 198. Has anything changed ever since?

Convenor-Barh Mukti Abhiyan 6-B Rajiv Nagar, Patna 800024 E-mail: dkmishra108@gmail.com Mob: +919431303360

The Bihar Flood Management Information System has been tracking the floods. There are maps from NRSA that show the extensive nature of the innundation. See for example the screen capture of Supaul district below: supaul.jpg

The dark blue lines show the normal river path and the light blue areas are inundated areas showing the new path of the Kosi River. The website of the Flood Management Information System is http://fmis.bih.nic.in . There are similar maps for the other affected districts, updated as much as on a daily basis. The maps are from NRSA imaging.

NASA's Earth Observatory has striking 'before' and 'after' images of the changed path of the river: http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/NaturalHazards/natural_hazards_v2.php3?img_id=15026&src=map 

BBC has similiar maps: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/7586824.stm 

and photos: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/in_pictures/7586256.stm 

The following site maintained by Sashikumar has a link to a Google Earth map that shows the changed path of the river including markers for nearby places (click on the "View in Google Earth link" at the top). It also has links to more information and press reports of the floods http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showflat.php/Cat/0/Number/1225770/an/0/page/0#122

Posted by
Get the latest news on water, straight to your inbox
Subscribe Now
Continue reading