Key Points

Punjab Chief Minister Bhagwant Mann met with Union Home Minister Amit Shah to discuss the state's flood crisis. He explained that the current central relief of Rs 1,600 crore is completely inadequate for the massive damage. The floods have affected over 20 lakh people and destroyed nearly 5 lakh acres of crops. Mann is seeking a special package and revised compensation norms to properly support the affected farmers and families.

Key Points: Bhagwant Mann Seeks Flood Package From Amit Shah For Punjab

  • Punjab suffered unprecedented floods affecting over 20 lakh people across 2,614 villages
  • More than 4.8 lakh acres of crops destroyed with 6.87 lakh people displaced
  • CM demands Rs 50,000 per acre compensation instead of current Rs 6,800
  • Preliminary loss estimates stand at Rs 13,832 crore covering agriculture and infrastructure
3 min read

Punjab CM calls on HM Amit Shah, seeks special flood package

Punjab CM meets Amit Shah seeking enhanced flood relief, demands Rs 50,000 per acre for farmers and revision of outdated compensation norms for 20 lakh affected people.

"Paying such a petty amount would be unfair to the farmers as the crops were almost at the harvesting stage. - Bhagwant Mann"

New Delhi, Sep 30

Punjab Chief Minister Bhagwant Mann, on Tuesday, called on Union Home Minister Amit Shah and sought a special package for the state in view of the damage caused due to unprecedented floods.

The Chief Minister apprised Union Minister Shah that the relief of Rs 1,600 crore announced by the Cental government was miniscule in the wake of grave loss suffered by the state.

He sought upward revision in norms for awarding compensation to the flood victims from the State Disaster Response Fund (SDRF) or National Disaster Response Force (NDRF).

He apprised the Union Home Minister that Punjab has faced one of its worst floods in decades, affecting more than 20 lakh people across 2,614 villages, with 6.87 lakh displaced.

Chief Minister Mann said that the disaster has caused widespread losses as more than 4.8 lakh acres of crops were destroyed, over 17,000 houses damaged, more than 2.5 lakh livestock affected and major damage to 4,657 km of rural roads, 485 bridges, 1,417 culverts and 190 mandis.

The Chief Minister added that the preliminary estimate of losses stands at Rs 13,832 crore, covering agriculture, infrastructure, health, education and livelihoods.

He said that the current SDRF and NDRF norms are grossly inadequate to address the actual scale of damages, adding input subsidy where crop loss is 33 per cent and above has been fixed as Rs 6,800 per acre by the Ministry of Home Affairs.

Mann said that paying such a petty amount would be unfair to the farmers as the crops were almost at the harvesting stage.

An amount of Rs 50,000 per acre should be paid to the farmers of the state, he added.

The Chief Minister said that he had already flagged the issue with the Union Home Ministry, adding as no response was there so the state has enhanced the compensation at its level by contributing from the state Budget.

He added that in a healing touch to the flood victims, the state government has decided to enhance the compensation of 26 to 33 per cent crop loss to Rs 10,000 per acre from existing Rs 2,000 per acre under SDRF norms, 33 to 75 per cent crop loss to Rs 10,000 from existing Rs 6,800 per acre and for 75 to 100 per cent crop loss compensation has been increased to Rs 20,000 per acre again from existing Rs 6,800.

The Chief Minister said in the Rs 20,000 per acre compensation being given to the farmers, the state government will contribute Rs 14,900, the highest in the country.

He added that the compensation for fully damaged and destroyed houses and severely damaged houses should be doubled from existing Rs 1.20 lakh per house in plain areas to Rs 2.40 lakh per house.

Likewise, Mann said that for partially damaged houses (other than huts) the compensation should be Rs 50,000 per house instead of existing Rs 6,500 per house for pucca houses and Rs 10,000 per house instead of existing Rs 4,000 per house for 'kutcha' houses.

Raising the issue of pending share of Rs 11,297 crore Rural Development Fee and market fees, the Chief Minister said that the development fee and market fees is not being reimbursed to the state despite clear provision to pay under Section 7 of the Punjab Rural Development Act, 1987, and as per Section 23 of Punjab Agriculture Produce Marketing Act, 1961.

He added that the purpose of this fund is to promote the agriculture and rural infrastructure, which ultimately add to overall development of agriculture, viz. rural road network, marketing infrastructure, augmentation of storage facility, land record computerisation, automation and mechanisation of mandis and others.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Good to see Punjab government taking initiative by increasing compensation from state budget. But Rs 11,297 crore pending from Centre is huge! This money could really help rebuild infrastructure and support affected families.
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Sarah B
As someone who visited Punjab recently, the flood damage is heartbreaking. Entire villages underwater, crops destroyed. The compensation norms definitely need revision - they were set decades ago and don't account for current costs.
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Arjun K
While I appreciate the state government's efforts, why did it take so long to approach the Centre? The floods happened months ago. Better coordination between state and central governments could have helped farmers sooner.
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Kavya N
My relatives in Punjab lost everything in these floods. Houses damaged, crops destroyed. The state contributing Rs 14,900 per acre shows commitment, but Centre's support is crucial. Hope Amit Shah ji approves the package soon! 🇮🇳
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Michael C
The scale of damage is massive - 20 lakh people affected, 4.8 lakh acres destroyed. This isn't just Punjab's problem, it affects national food security. Central government should treat this as a national priority.
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Nikhil C
Good to see detailed demands being placed. The compensation for houses needs urgent revision - Rs 1.2 lakh can

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