Floods: two dead in Arunachal\, Assam toll 36

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Floods: two dead in Arunachal, Assam toll 36

A flood-affected woman collects drinking water from a well, in Morigaon district of Assam on June 25, 2020.   | Photo Credit: PTI

OIL well capping operation hit in Tinsukia; AIR station in Dibrugarh inundated

Landslide induced by heavy rain killed a minor in Arunachal Pradesh capital Itanagar on Thursday while a woman drowned in twin city Naharlagun. Another person drowned in Assam’s Dhemaji district as the death toll due to flood and landslides since mid-May increased to 36.

Officials in Itanagar said the body was of the minor was retrieved from under the debris at the city’s Doni Colony after 8 am on Thursday. Around the same time, a woman’s body was retrieved from the Lagun River near Naharlagun.

“Heavy rainfall for three days has added to our problem of combating COVID-19,” Chief Minister Pema Khandu said, announcing an immediate release of ₹4 lakh to the next of kin of each victim.

Situation worsens

The flood situation in Assam worsened with the number of affected people jumping from 37,675 to 1,89,314 across nine districts in less than 24 hours.

“A person drowned in Dhemaji’s Sisiborgaon area today (Thursday). So far, 15 people have died by drowning in two waves of floods while landslides claimed 21 others,” a spokesperson of Assam State Disaster Management Authority said.

Floodwaters inundated the Baghjan site in Tinsukia district where a natural gas wells caught fire almost a fortnight after a blowout on May 27, hampering Oil India Limited’s capping operations. A concrete bridge on the road to the site was also damaged, preventing movement of men and material.

In the adjoining Dibrugarh district, heavy rainfall resulted in water-logging in several areas of district headquarters Dibrugarh. The worst affected was the All India Radio station, where short-circuit due to flooding led to the suspension of all broadcast services from the studios.

“We are broadcasting from an emergency transmitter at Lepetkata, 18 km away. The entire complex is inundated because of faulty drainage system,” said AIR’s programme executive Lohit Deka.

AIR Dibrugarh is among India’s 13 most sophisticated stations with high-power transmitter and has been broadcasting programmes in 12 languages and dialects – six in Assam and six in Arunachal Pradesh. It is also among the most awarded, having received 27 national awards for innovative programmes.

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