- home
- Publication & Resources
- Blog
- ‘There was slush everywhere’
‘There was slush everywhere’
“On the midnight of 16th August, my dog started howling briskly; alarmed, I went to see him and heard some unusual commotion outside. Within ten minutes and before I could apprehend the situation, floods broke out, unstoppable water along with mud came smashing everything,” narrated Tiju Samson, a resident of Munnar, Idukki district to CASA reporters.
By Md Mahfooz Alam
Intern | CASA Communications
Incessant rainfall is nothing new to Kerala, but the month of August this year received consistent heavy rainfall, with dams overflowing beyond its capacities. Left with no option, the authorities opened 35 dams which flooded all 14 districts of Kerala.
Tiju Samson on further enquiry, elaborated, “Water was up to our neck, and mud houses were washed off because of landslides. People were evacuated and send to relief camps. I along with my brother and some other young people rescued many but sadly we couldn’t rescue Satish, his wife and their two children. They died trapped in their house, although we did save his mother.”
The damage to infrastructure has been mammoth – local houses, schools, colleges are completely submerged; roads are damaged; railways stuck and airports shut down. V G Suresh, a local resident recounts in pain, “I am living in my relative’s house. My house and all the belongings were washed away in the flood and I can’t reconstruct it without government aid. He further adds, “I have two school going daughters. Their study materials are completely destroyed – I am left with no resource to send them school again.”
Farmers, fisherman and the daily wage workers are in miserable state. Soman from Kuttanad said, “The basic necessities of livelihood – agriculture, livestock and boats are lost; the paddy and banana fields are submerged in water, fisherman are out of job.”
One of the Panchayat Presidents said, “There is no potable water because the supply is cut off and there is severe hygiene and sanitation problem. The water is still stagnant in the houses which may lead to water borne diseases.”
The woman in the photograph is a resident of Kottayam district whose house was washed away in the floods. Presently, she is staying at her mother’s house which was also partly damaged in the August deluge. Upon asking
why they were continuing living in a vulnerable house, her mother revealed, “We tried living in the relief shelters but other residents were not comfortable sharing the same roof with my daughter as her mental health condition is not stable. She gets recurrent flashbacks of her house being washed away in the floods, and that makes her emotionally
unstable and restless. We had to come back to this house as we have no other place to live.”
– The interviewees didn’t wish to be named
Featured Post
International Women’s Day -2021
8 Mar 2021
International Women’s Day -2021 is very special for CASA. It’s a delight to announce, CASA with the support of the Church of Sweden has launched an exclusive Gender Desk to emphasise the importance of Gender Justice work. CASA has been working for Gender Justice all throughout and across our constituencies in all these years. Gender Desk comes to add vigour […]
Overcoming Gender and Poverty Barriers
Poverty has been an inevitable problem in India since the beginning of time. The increasing problems of poverty caused by overpopulation and the unequal distribution of wealth among the people have led to a huge impact on the life of millions in the rural as well as the urban area. A person has to acquire […]
Impact of Climate Change on Women
16 Jan 2021
Climate change is a prevailing problem globally whose hazardous repercussions extend beyond the environment. Shrinking glaciers, extinction of plants and animal species, mutation, rise in the Earth’s average temperature and triggered seasonal fluctuations, are some of the impacts of climate change that have already grabbed the headline. Certain early predictions pertaining to climate changes had […]