Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Ghaghra, the untamed sorrow of Bahraich

The river has a habit of destroying lives and upsetting developmen­t plans. This polling season the Samajwadi Party government is keen to score some points

- Kumkum Dasgupta and Manish Chandra Pandey

BAHRAICH (UTTAR PRADESH): “She is mad, very mad. We have done several pujas to make her happy but she refuses to calm down.”

This is how Nirmala Devi, a 45-yearold housewife, describes the mercurial Ghaghra river that swallowed several homes, acres of precious agricultur­al land and schools this monsoon. Only the village temple remains, perched precarious­ly on a sliver of land.

Her village — Goleganj at Pakharpur block of Bahraich district in Uttar Pradesh — is now a hodgepodge of thatched houses along an unmetalled road.

“Monsoon flooding is not the only problem with Ghaghra. It changes its course, eroding the banks and destroying everything in its route,” the mother of four told HT.

Nirmala Devi has been a victim of Ghaghra’s mood swings four times in her life. She lost her home twice when she was in school, once after she got married and again this year. With land and house gone, the men have migrated to Punjab for work; women, children and old people have been left behind.

Along the roadside, disillusio­nment hangs in the air: The Ghaghra’s victims claim that like the river, the district administra­tion too has left them high and dry; a charge the officials deny.

The Ghaghra is a perennial transbound­ary river originatin­g in the Tibetan Plateau near lake Mansarovar. It cuts through the Himalayas in Nepal and joins the Sharda river at Brahmaghat. Together they form the Ghaghra.

During the reign of Awadh nawabs, Ghaghra was used as a waterway for ferrying indigo, sugar, poppy seed and mustard, and till about late-1970s there was a ferry service from Bahraich to neighbouri­ng Barabanki district. It is now part of the Centre’s ambitious Jal Marg Vikas Project that proposes to use waterways to transport goods.

POLL HOPES

As the country’s most populous state gets into campaign-mode for the 2017 assembly polls, the people of Bahraich are hoping that politician­s will take up the issue and figure out a way to control the river’s wayward ways.

They want boulder lining along the river’s banks to cut flood losses and also a better compensati­on and rehabilita­tion package.

“The issue of floods, erosion and compensati­on have been a long-standing demand but in UP, developmen­t issues lose out to caste and religion during polls,” says Dr Jai Narain Budhwar, a former professor at Bahraich’s Kisan PG College.

Samajwadi Party (SP) MLA from Balah constituen­cy Banshidhar Baudh, however, told HT that he will raise this issue and blamed the Centre for regular flooding and erosion.

“This Himalayan river carries silt and boulders. Boulders need to be removed to ensure the river does not deviate from its path. But since it moves through a reserve forest, the central norms don’t allow clearing boulders,” he said, adding that the SP government has written several letters to the Centre but to no avail.

Many blamed Nepal for releasing extra water into the river and flooding downstream areas in UP.

“This is rubbish. All structures are manned by the water resources department of UP or Bihar and Nepal has little to do with its handling. If anybody releases water, it is WRD of the respective states but it comes handy to blame Nepal for the floods downstream,” says Dinesh Mishra, an IIT graduate and convenor, Barh Mukti Abhiyan, and author of several books on rivers.

In 1996, India and Nepal signed a pact to build a dam on Nepal’s Mahakali river, which becomes Sharda in Uttara- khand and then joins Ghaghra, to generate hydropower and mitigate floods in UP, but there has been little progress.

FINDING A SOLUTION

Environmen­talists say that a dam is not a long-term solution as sediments carried in the river will fill the reservoir too. Moreover, the proposed dam at Pancheswar will be built in a seismic zone and could have ecological and social impacts.

“The flood moderation versus hydropower and irrigation objectives are operationa­lly in contradict­ion with each other. The Pancheswar dam is unlikely to mitigate threat of floods in this area,” says Himashu Thakkar of South Asia Network on Dams, Rivers and People.

About 10 km from Goleganj is the unfinished Chahlari Ghat bridge on the Sitapur-bahraich road. It has been under constructi­on for nearly a decade.

“The plan was to build two bridges connected by a dam in the middle. This was done taking into account the river’s current. After the first half of the bridge was completed, the river’s course and current changed, forcing work to stop ,” explains Shariq Rais Siddiqui, a resident of Bahraich. “Hopefully, our dream will come true before the elections”.

The signals from Lucknow have been encouragin­g: Work has restarted with chief minister Akhilesh Yadav, who is looking for a second term, directing officials to finish the bridge over the Ghaghra in this financial year.

 ?? ARUN SHARMA/HT PHOTO ?? A staterun primary school at Kayampura village in Bahraich district which was destroyed by the Ghaghra river this monsoon.
ARUN SHARMA/HT PHOTO A staterun primary school at Kayampura village in Bahraich district which was destroyed by the Ghaghra river this monsoon.

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