Oman Daily Observer

Idukki has gone back by 40 years due to floods: Power minister

NO ISSUE: Chief minister confident funds will come for re-building Kerala

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IDUKKI: The hilly district of Idukki has been thrown back by 40 years following Kerala’s worst flooding in a century, Power Minister M M Mani said on Sunday.

“What our forefather­s built in the past 100 years to take Idukki to where it was has been washed away. Idukki has gone back by 40 years,” the Marxist leader told the media.

This is one of the worst disasters Idukki has witnessed, he lamented.

Long considered home to settlers, the main occupation in Idukki is farming. But with its numerous hills and treacherou­s terrain, life has never been easy in the district.

Idukki is also home to some of the major dams which, when their sluice gates were opened after their water level came to the choking points, caused unpreceden­ted destructio­n all over the state this month.

On Sunday, the Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan expressed confidence that funds to rebuild Kerala is not going to be a problem.

“Today across sectors people are contributi­ng to Kerala. Just imagine how much there will be if all the working people decide to contribute one month’s salary for Kerala,” he told a TV channel.

“Today the issue is not about the amount but on whether the money can be accepted,” he said. “In the coming days this will be resolved.”

Idukki received one of its highest rainfalls starting from the end of May till the middle of August. This pushed up the water levels in the Idukki, Mulaperiya­r and other dams.

For the first time in 26 years, the shutters of the Idukki dam were opened, causing a deluge.

“This is the worst destructio­n I have seen,” said Mani, who is from the ruling Communist Party of Indiamarxi­st (CPI-M).

So bad is the situation that to reach the state capital Thiruvanan­thapuram from Idukki, Mani had to take a detour through the neighbouri­ng state of Tamil Nadu as the main link road linking Idukki and Thiruvanan­thapuram has been damaged. Mani came under severe attack from the opposition for faulty dam water management but he insisted that all rules were followed.

“Everything was done according to clear-cut guidelines after discussing with all concerned,” he said.

The waters gushing out from the Idukki dam spread out far and wide, damaging everything that came in its way and forcing hundreds of thousands to take shelter in relief camps.

While rains and flooding caused widespread damage to crops and buildings, landslides damaged several key roads connecting the major towns in the district with interior areas.

Roshy Augustine, an Idukki legislator, said on Sunday that massive efforts were needed to get Idukki back on its feet and rehabilita­te all those who had lost everything they had.

 ??  ?? While rains and flooding caused widespread damage to crops and buildings, landslides damaged several key roads.
While rains and flooding caused widespread damage to crops and buildings, landslides damaged several key roads.

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