Key Points

Heavy rainfall has caused the Baitarani River to overflow, flooding four villages in Jajpur district. Nearly 600 people have been evacuated, with no casualties reported so far. The district administration is actively managing relief efforts as water levels gradually recede. The IMD has issued a yellow alert for multiple Odisha districts, warning of continued thunderstorms.

Key Points: Jajpur Floods Affect 600 as Baitarani River Rises in Odisha

  • 600 people displaced across 4 Jajpur villages
  • Baitarani River crosses danger mark at Akhuapada
  • IMD issues yellow alert for Odisha districts
  • Evacuations completed with food relief provided
2 min read

Odisha floods: Nearly 600 people of 4 villages affected in Jajpur

Over 600 people in Jajpur displaced as Baitarani River floods 4 villages, rescue ops underway with no casualties reported.

"The water level is receding. No casualties have been reported. – ADM Sibanand Swain"

Jajpur, July 28

Rising water of the Baitarani river, due to incessant rainfall, triggered severe flooding in Jajpur district of Odisha, affecting nearly 600 people and 150 households of four villages, an official said.

The district administration has evacuated people from the inundated villages of Dashrathpur and Jajpur blocks and has begun the rescue and relief operations.

Additional District Magistrate Sibanand Swain assured that the situation is under control as the water level is gradually receding. No loss of lives has been reported.

"The water level has risen, but now the situation is under control. Four villages have been affected, nearly 600 people covering 150 households. We have evacuated them and provided them with food," ADM Sibanand Swain told ANI.

"The water level is receding. No casualties have been reported," he added.

The Jajpur district administration had issued a flood warning on Saturday after the Baitarani river had crossed the danger mark at Akhuapada

On Saturday, Chief Engineer of Water Resources Lingraj Gaur said, "The catchment of the Baitrani river experienced heavy rainfall on Friday. We got rainfall of around 150mm to 200 mm for three days in some places. There is definitely a flood-like situation."

"Akhuapada danger level is 18.33, and now the present level is 18.8. We are observing that increase of 12mm per hour. So it might go upto 19 or more than that. A flood-like situation is there, but not a heavy flood," he added.

Meanwhile, the India Meteorological Department has issued a yellow warning for Monday, forecasting thunderstorms with lightning in the districts of Balasore, Bhadrak, Jajpur, Kendrapara, Cuttack, Jagatsinghpur, Sundargarh, Jharsuguda, Bargarh, Sambalpur, Deogarh, Angul, Dhenkanal, Keonjhar, and Mayurbhanj.

"Squally wind speed reaching 35-45 kmph gusting to 55 kmph is prevailing over North Bay of Bengal, along & off Odisha, West Bengal and Bangladesh coasts during 26th to 29th July," IMD said.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
I'm glad to see the administration acted quickly with evacuations. The warning systems seem to be working better than before. Hope relief reaches all affected families soon.
A
Ananya R
As someone from coastal Odisha, I can say our people are resilient but tired of this annual suffering. Where are the long-term solutions? More dams? Better drainage? Politicians only wake up during election season.
K
Karthik V
The IMD warnings were accurate this time. Kudos to their improved forecasting! But we need to question why villages near Baitarani keep getting flooded year after year. Is anyone looking at permanent solutions?
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Priya S
My relatives in Jajpur are safe but their crops are destroyed. This is the worst time for floods - right before harvest. Government compensation never covers the actual losses. Farmers suffer the most 😢
D
David E
The coordination between district administration and disaster response teams seems better this year. Timely evacuations saved lives. Now focus should be on preventing waterborne diseases in relief camps.

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