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Thursday, September 25, 2014

Senate wants FO to lodge protest with India


.— AP file photo
.— AP file photo
ISLAMABAD: The Senate’s Standing Committee on Kashmir Affairs and Gilgit-Baltistan has decided to lodge a formal protest with India through the Foreign Office over discrimination being meted out to the Muslims by authorities in India-held Kashmir (IHK) during flood relief operation.
The decision was made at a meeting of the committee, headed by Baz Mohammad Khan of the Awami National Party, here on Wednesday.
The meeting was briefed on the “loss of human life and livestock and damage caused to property, roads and infrastructure due to recent heavy rains and floods in Azad Jammu and Kashmir (AJK), measures taken to prevent such losses and rescue and relief activities in the flood-stricken areas of AJK”.

Kashmiri Muslims facing discrimination in flood relief


Mr Khan told Dawn that AJK’s chief secretary told the meeting that Indian authorities had adopted a discriminatory attitude to flood-affected Muslims in IHK and were providing no assistance to them.
He said the committee members expressed concern over such reports and said there should be no discrimination with any segment of population in the wake of a natural disaster like flood and earthquake.
They said India, known as the world’s biggest secular democracy, should abandon its discriminatory attitude in providing relief to the flood-affected people of the IHK.
The committee’s chairman said they would write a letter to the Foreign Office and ask it to take up the matter with India. They plan to call the FO officials in the next meeting of the committee on the issue.
According to an official handout, the meeting was informed by the chief secretary that the losses in the region were mainly caused by landslides triggered by rains and flash floods.
The committee members expressed concerns over poor preventive and precautionary measures taken by the AJK administration. They suggested that iron gabions should be built to prevent landslides.
But the chief secretary said the mountain terrain in AJK had wet soil and the situation was uncontrollable after widespread rains. Moreover, the mountains have become weak after the 2005 earthquake and landslides have become a regular feature.
The committee was informed that about 3,000 people had been evacuated from Bagh, Poonch, Kotli and Mirpur.
Federal Minister for Kashmir Affairs and Gilgit-Baltistan Barjees Tahir proposed that chairman of the National Disaster Management Authority, the director general of metrological department and the foreign secretary should also be called in the next meeting of the committee. The proposal was welcomed by the chairman.

Hundreds of thousands marooned by floods in India-held Kashmir


SRINAGAR: An air force helicopter rescues a resident from a house inundated by floodwaters here on Tuesday.—AFP
SRINAGAR: An air force helicopter rescues a resident from a house inundated by floodwaters here on Tuesday.—AFP
SRINAGAR: Emergency workers battled on Tuesday to reach hundreds of thousands of people marooned by floods in India-held Kashmir, as anger grew over the speed of the rescue effort.
The army said it was airlifting boats to the worst-hit areas of the disputed territory, where whole villages had been submerged and an estimated 400,000 people stranded in the worst flooding for half a century.
“The situation in Kashmir Valley is still very grim, it is quite critical,” said Rajesh Kumar, police Inspector General of the Jammu region in Jammu and Kashmir state.
“I don’t know how many exactly, but there are many stuck in neck-deep water and need help as soon as possible,” he said.
But with large parts of the state — including the capital Srinagar — under water, rescuers were struggling to find enough vessels to ferry stranded people to safety.
The home ministry said over 260 boats had been deployed, while the army said 100 were being airlifted from New Delhi.
But many Srinagar residents said they were left to fend for themselves in the fast-flowing floods when rescue workers failed to arrive.
One man was seen hanging precariously from a rope strung from one side of the raging waters to another — his only way of getting across.
Another, retired college teacher Abdul Latif Rather, said he and his wife had waited hours for help on Sunday as the waters engulfed their home.
Local boys eventually came to their rescue with a makeshift raft and ferried them out to safety. “They risked their own lives to get us,” he said as he sat on the roadside near his flooded home.
“The entire (state) administration is a failure, is a disaster.”
Indian authorities said the death toll from the floods was around 200 people. Some 400,000 people remained stranded mainly in Srinagar and south Kashmir, the Press Trust of India news agency quoted local officials as saying.
“There are still a few hundred thousand stranded in Srinagar (alone). About 60-70 per cent of the city is flooded,” Jammu divisional commissioner Shantmanu, who uses just one name, said.
At a wedding hall on Srinagar’s outskirts, some 400 people, including families with young children, sat exhausted on the floor, after floodwaters submerged their homes.
“Everything happened so fast. The waters came rushing and we didn’t have time to pack anything,” Ruqsat Banu said as she comforted her elderly in-laws.
“The (rescue workers) were prioritising people, they were taking the women and the children but the men were left behind,” said Banu, who had to leave without her husband.
“We don’t know if he is all right, what has happened to him,” she said. “We lost everything.”
Banu, who is in her mid-twenties, arrived on Sunday at the hall in Sanatnagar where residents have flocked since days of heavy monsoon rains flooded the Jhelum river.
Locals who run the Sir Mohammed Iqbal hall, one of the few refuges with electricity, were busy serving food to victims, while others were stockpiling bandages and basic medicines in a corner.
“I’ve never seen anything like this in my lifetime. It’s unprecedented, everything is underwater,” 70-year-old S. Nabi said as he watched the chaos around him.
The military has stepped up its rescue efforts, with 47,227 people evacuated so far and 61 planes and helicopters pressed into action, the home ministry said.
Some water and electricity lines were restored in areas that were less severely affected, Mr Kumar said.
“The main highway is still cut off from everything. But thankfully, many other road networks have been restored to a large extent. “Closer to central Srinagar, past rows and rows of flooded houses and other buildings, Abdul Rashid, his wife and two daughters gathered with others on a bridge to wait for help.
The Rashid family was rescued by army helicopter from the roof terrace of their neighbour’s home where they had scrambled in the middle of Sunday night.
“We got there (to the terrace) just in the nick of time. We watched as our house just collapsed in the waters,” said Rashid.

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