Uttarakhand: Natural disasters

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Uttarakhand: A history of disasters

Uttarakhand.jpg

Uttarakhand, forest fires

Remedies, preventive steps

The Times of India, May 08 2016

Sharma Seema

Flames have destroyed 4,000 hectares of forests. From clearing pine needles to fire lines, here are some lessons that need to be learnt Finally , Uttarakhand's forests are no longer ablaze. The last of the fires were doused on Wednesday as the skies opened up and the rain gods took over the firefighting job from 11,000 personnel. By then, almost 4,000 hectares of the Himalayan state's forest cover had been gutted. The economic loss is still being calculated but the cost to the environment may be worse. Scientists warn that the black carbon from the fires may melt glaciers, cause a delay in the monsoons and pollute rivers. Massive soil erosion due to loss of the upper soil layer may also trigger floods if the monsoons are heavy this year.

Pine needles menace

What could have fanned the blaze? Was it the chir pine trees that make up 16-17% of the state's forests? The highly combustible pine needles from these trees are believed to be a major culprit in the fires spreading rapidly across the jungles. According to estimates, more than 3 crore tonnes of pine needles spread across the state's 53 lakh hectares of forest have not been cleared for years. “These pine needles are filled with resin and are ticking time bombs which can raze entire jungles with one flick of a matchstick,“ says environmentalist Anil Joshi. The high temperature and dry earth due to scanty rainfall in the winter months may have added further fuel.

Now, the forest department is asking villagers staying near forests to take away the pine needles -as many as they want. State forest secretary S Ramaswamy says the government is also exploring ways to utilize them as raw material in small electric projects, making of fuel bricks, etc.

Maintaining fire lines

Proven fire-preventing practices, some dating to colonial times, have been ignored. Over 4,500 fire lines -stretches kept vegetation-free to stop fires from spreading -most of which were set up by the British, have not been maintained for years. These are now overgrown with trees, which cannot be removed due to a Supreme Court ban on tree-felling above an altitude of 1,000 metres. Ramaswamy says there are now plans to clear the fire lines and the government is “waiting for a written order from the environment ministry“.

Fund crunch

Meanwhile, the blame game is on. “A Rs 8-crore fund was released from the CAMPA (Compensatory Afforestation Fund Management and Planning Au thority) scheme to make arrangements for fire control and clear the fire lines.The fund, which should have been made available to the forest department by January, came just a week ago when large parts of the forest had been gutted,“ says a senior forest official.

Delay in funds is a primary reason cited by officials for not containing the fires in time. “It is essential that funds are made available in December-January before the start of the fire season so that forest officials can be provided with the necessary equipment and sufficient manpower is at hand, especially fire watchers and labourers who can work on clearing old fire lines and making new ones,“ says Amit Negi, state disaster management secretary.

Who's accountable?

Experts say officials cannot shirk responsibility by citing insufficient funds.“In the 1950s, a forest ranger would have been denied promotion if his range had serious forest fires. Thermometers were maintained in each ranger's office to keep a watch on the temperature and sound an alert if it reached a certain threshold, above which there was a risk of fire,“ says R S Tolia, former chief secretary of Uttarakhand. “Of course, at that time, the area under a range was much smaller. Today , forest staff is burdened with management of much larger territories and has to deal with increasing political interference. But this is no excuse for lack of accountability on their part,“ he adds. An inquiry has been ordered by the chief secretary on why fire lines were not cleared in time.

Involve locals

Questions are also being asked about why the help of local communities residing near forests was not sought. Forest officials say almost all the fires were ignited by villagers who believe the fresh grass that grows from the ashes is nutritious, providing rich fodder for their cattle. “We chose to ignore their acts because we didn't want to antagonize them,“ says an official. But as fires spiralled out of control, 48 cases were registered in April against those responsible for starting them.

Rather than penalising, says Tolia, villagers should be co-opted into a participatory role. “There are almost 12,000 van panchayats, governing bodies of villagers to manage forests near their village. They can play an active role in fire dousing or curbing illegal activities if coordination is smooth,“ he says.

Uttarakhand floods, 2015

Sharp rise in mental disorders

The Times of India, Oct 11 2015

Shivani Azad

U'khand floods lead to deluge of mentally ill

'Number rises from 60 in 2012 to 7,000 in 2015

The number of patients with `severe mental disorders' has multiplied 100 times in the last three years in Uttarakhand -from 60 in 2012 to almost 7,000 today as per the data compiled by the state health department. A large part of the jump, say worried health officials, can be attributed to the devastating floods of 2013 that killed thousands and displaced lakhs, with innumerable families still waiting for their missing kin to come back. Many are yet to get over the trauma, say doctors.

“That (the floods) led to a number of mental disorders like depression and schizophrenia,“ said an official, adding, “Compounding it are factors like hectic lifestyles, increasingly disrupted family structure and growing unemployment among the youth.“

Acknowledging that the problem was a serious one, J S Bisht, senior psychiatrist of the State Mental Health Institute in Selaqui, said, “As a society, we should be sensitive towards people who are diagnosed with this illness. Unfor tunately , in Uttarakhand, patients are treated as cursed individuals. This stigma and discrimination is prevalent right from family members to hospital care givers. There are times when the kin of mental patients are not ready to take them back and we have to seek legal intervention.“

What is compounding the problem is that the state doesn't have any public rehabilitation centre for mental patients. According to Bisht, 7% of Uttarakhand's population reportedly suffer from some form of mental ailment.

Incidentally , the state has been planning to start a reha bilitation centre in Haridwar for the past six years, which is moving at snail's pace.

When Vishnu Singh Dhanik, director of social welfare department, was asked the reason for the delay , he said, “The proposals we had received for running the rehabilitation centres were not meeting the criteria set by us. But recently , we have received a few good proposals and we are mulling over outsourcing the mental rehabilitation work.“

Interestingly , this year's mental health day's theme is `dignity in mental health.'

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