Uttarakhand relief material to last only till July 25

22 July,2013 11:30 PM IST |   |  Agencies

NGOs and volunteers providing aid to victims of the Uttarakhand rain-flood tragedy say help and resources have trickled down a month later


The initial rush of relief material for Uttarakhand has come down to a trickle more than a month after the rain-flood tragedy, leaving NGOs wondering how to provide for thousands of locals stranded in the remote villages of Kedarnath and other affected areas.

The few NGOs working on the ground and supplying relief material say that after a month, the aid and donations have begun to dwindle.


Left with nothing: The Uttarakhand floods destroyed thousands of homes and left several others without a livelihood. File Pic

"We forget easily. Along with the dying wave of sympathy, the funds for those affected are also dwindling. The relief material and funds are trickling down.

There are still people who don't even have matchboxes to light their stoves; people have lost earning members in their families; some have lost their entire home and life savings in the floods; others lost their means of livelihood. They need help," said Avenash Datta, country head (Programmes), HelpAge India.

According to the NGOs, the relief material with them can lastonly till July 25, and after that many households will run out of dry rations and other essentials like match boxes to light stoves.

Bhupendra Lal (35), his wife and two children were surviving on rain water for three days in a village in Tehri, until a bag of relief material brought by a volunteer reached them.

Thousands of flash-flood survivors like Lal's family who braved nature's fury and are cut off from the mainland are now at the mercy of intermittent relief.

The NGOs are trying hard to reach remote and inaccessible villages for carrying out relief work. They say in the initial few weeks after the June 17 tragedy there was a ‘contest' between political parties and voluntary organisations in sending relief material, which was not streamlined in a systematic manner, as a result of which hundreds of needy people did not receive aid.

"Though our country is prone to disaster, we are not prepared. We don't think, and there is no mechanism or control room to direct relief. A centre or hub is necessary in Dehradun or Rishikesh to unload all the relief materials and then distribute it in a systematic manner; which would then be taken in smaller vehicles to remote areas and from there be passed on to volunteers who can reach the survivors," said Anshu Gupta, founder director of NGO Goonj.

He also urged the people to think about others' sensitivities before donating their old discarded and used clothes. "We have received piles of old undergarments and dirty mattresses and old clothes. People should think before sending such stuff. Just because people are stuck in a disaster doesn't mean that they can wear old clothes and use substandard things," Gupta pointed out.

The essential relief material needed by the NGOs include saris, clothes, blankets, tarpaulin sheets, woollens, dry rations (sugar, wheat powder, rice, spices, chilli powder, turmeric powder, coriander powder, milk powder), feeding bottles, buckets, cooking pans, washing soap, detergent powder and water purifier.

Help required
Those who wish to contribute can seek further information on goonj.org, savethechildrenindia.org, and helpageindia.org.

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