Silver Spring, Maryland, USA [ANN; CD EUDNews]. Seventh-day Adventist humanitarians in northern India are monitoring needs and preparing emergency relief in the wake of an unprecedented monsoon season in the region.
The torrential rains arrived a month early this year, in June, triggering flash floods and landslides that swept through mountain communities and religious sites. The monsoons destroyed homes and businesses, killed more than 1,000 people, and stranded tens of thousands of pilgrims and tourists visiting Hindu shrines in the Himalayan state of Uttarakhand, according to news reports.
While government and relief agency efforts so far are centered in the district of Uttarkashi, the Adventist Development and Relief Agency in India is preparing emergency assistance for Rudraprayag district, where 20 riverside villages were severely affected, said Gladwin Bol, emergency response coordinator for ADRA India.
“These local communities have lost everything—their homes, land, livelihood, and belongings,” Bol said. Other nearby villages remain inaccessible because of ongoing inclement weather and blocked roads, he said.
“We will be able to move to the area as soon as we get clearance,” he said.
ADRA India is prepared to provide utensils, blankets, clothes, mosquito nets, hygiene items, tarps, buckets, and other relief items, Bol said.
Meanwhile local officials have set up 40 relief camps to provide food, water, and other emergency aid to tourists and locals, according to an ADRA Situation Report. News reports indicate that military helicopters have also rescued an estimated 30,000 stranded people, but bad weather continues to thwart efforts.
Bol said ADRA India will implement its initial emergency response based on the findings of an assessment team currently at work. The team is backed up by local nongovernmental agencies with more ground presence in the affected region than ADRA, which is headquartered further south in Delhi.
pictures: 1. Indian people look at a collapsed road and flooded river in the northern state of Uttarakhand (AFP/Getty Images). 2. Buildings are partly submerged in the flooded Alaknanda River in Govind Ghat, India (AP Photo).