Key Points

The Yamuna River’s rising waters have submerged Yamuna Bazar, forcing residents to evacuate hastily. Many are now stranded on rooftops or in temporary tents without access to food. Officials have opened Okhla Barrage gates to manage the swelling river levels. Locals compare the crisis to last year’s floods, expressing frustration over inadequate relief efforts.

Key Points: Yamuna Bazar Floods Leave Delhi Residents Stranded Without Food

  • Yamuna River nears 206m evacuation mark
  • Residents flee homes with minimal belongings
  • Temporary tents lack food and cooking facilities
  • Officials open Okhla Barrage gates as water rises
2 min read

Delhi's Yamuna Bazar flooded as river swells; residents struggle without food, shelter

Rising Yamuna River forces evacuations in Delhi as residents face food shortages and shelter crises in Yamuna Bazar.

"We are forced to stay on roofs. We are not getting any food. – Dev Prakash Pandey"

New Delhi, Aug 19

Rising Yamuna water levels have flooded Delhi's Yamuna Bazar and surrounding areas, forcing residents to abandon their homes and take shelter in temporary tents or on rooftops.

At 8 a.m. on Tuesday, the Yamuna River at Delhi's Old Railway Bridge recorded a water level of 205.85 metres -- just short of the 206-metre evacuation mark.

On Monday afternoon, the river had already crossed the danger level of 205.33 metres, touching 205.55 metres, and has been steadily rising since then.

With floodwaters entering homes, families were forced to evacuate hurriedly.

"Yesterday, at around 7.00 p.m., water started coming into our homes. We had to run away, taking only important things. We are very troubled," Vivek, a local, told IANS.

Another resident, Surendra Kumar, said, "This problem had been there for the past few days, but yesterday things worsened as the water started coming in. The government has set up tents, and we are staying there for now. However, we cannot cook since our homes are flooded, and we have not received any food yet from the administration."

"Since yesterday afternoon, water has accumulated, causing severe difficulties, and belongings have been shifted to the roof," said Anirudh, another local.

Dev Prakash Pandey added, "We are facing a lot of problems. So many things, our belongings, everything is destroyed. We are forced to stay on roofs. We are not getting any food."

"Similar scenes were seen in 2023. They are saying the water levels will also rise. We are facing a lot of problems," Gauri Shankar said.

Authorities have opened all gates of the Okhla Barrage following the rising water levels.

Meanwhile, residents continue to struggle with inadequate relief arrangements, especially the lack of food distribution in the flooded localities.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
No food distribution? This is basic humanity! The administration should have arranged langar or community kitchens immediately. Shameful that people are going hungry while officials make announcements.
M
Michael C
Visiting Delhi from Canada and seeing this devastation is eye-opening. The resilience of these people is remarkable. Hope international aid organizations can step in to help with immediate relief.
A
Ananya R
We need better urban planning and flood management systems. This isn't just about relief but prevention. The Yamuna floodplains have been encroached upon for years. Time for tough decisions.
S
Sarah B
Are there any local NGOs or community groups organizing help? I'd like to contribute supplies or volunteer. Sometimes citizens need to step up when government response is slow.
V
Vikram M
The same areas get flooded every monsoon. Instead of temporary tents, we need permanent elevated shelters in flood-prone zones. Basic disaster preparedness is missing in our planning.
K
Kavya N
My relatives live near Yamuna Bazar and they've been without electricity for 2 days. The water has damaged transformers and there's no timeline for restoration. This is beyond just flooding now.

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