Reliance Foundation brings critical health and livelihood relief to flood-hit Assam districts

ANI July 5, 2025 291 views

Reliance Foundation has mounted an impressive emergency response to the devastating floods in Assam. Their multi-pronged approach addresses critical challenges faced by flood-affected communities across 50 villages. By focusing on clean water, health awareness, and livestock support, the foundation is helping vulnerable families recover and rebuild. The relief effort demonstrates the power of rapid, community-centered humanitarian intervention during natural disasters.

"Our efforts focus on both immediate needs and long-term resilience" - Reliance Foundation Relief Team
Guwahati, July 5: As Assam grapples with the aftermath of a severe flood, Reliance Foundation (RF) has stepped up with a comprehensive relief effort that has touched the lives of tens of thousands. In some of the worst-hit districts of Cachar, Nagaon, and Sribhumi, RF has intervened to address urgent health risks and provided vital support to protect livelihoods, a press release said.

Key Points

1

Portable water filtration unit provides 3,000 litres of clean drinking water

2

15 livestock care camps treat over 5,300 animals

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1,500 sanitation kits distributed to flood-affected families

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Over 74,000 people reached with public health awareness campaigns

The floods, which struck in late May and early June, caused widespread damage, sweeping away homes, contaminating water sources, and putting vulnerable groups like women, children, and livestock-reliant families at risk. In response, Reliance Foundation launched a multi-pronged initiative across 50 flood-affected villages, focusing on early warning dissemination, public health awareness, clean drinking water access, veterinary support, and hygiene kit distribution.

Even before the floods arrived, Reliance Foundation was working on the ground -- issuing early warnings to help communities in vulnerable villages prepare, evacuate when needed, and minimise the impact of the disaster.

Once floodwaters rose, the Foundation's public health campaign quickly followed, reaching over 74,000 people with crucial information on disease prevention, safe water practices, and hygiene. The campaign paid special attention to the needs of women and adolescent girls, often among the hardest hit during crises.

Contaminated water sources are among the biggest health hazards after floods. To tackle this, Reliance Foundation set up a portable water filtration unit that turned dirty surface water into safe drinking water. In just five days, around 3,000 litres of clean water were provided to about 200 people living in high-risk areas. The team also ran sessions on safe water storage and handling to help families protect themselves from waterborne diseases.

With many families relying on livestock for income and food security, animal health became a priority. The Foundation organised 15 livestock care camps where more than 5,300 animals were treated and 656 farmers received direct veterinary support. These efforts provided much-needed relief to households struggling to recover their livelihoods.

Maintaining hygiene in the middle of a disaster isn't easy. To help families cope, Reliance Foundation distributed 1,500 sanitation kits packed with practical essentials like soaps, toothbrushes, toothpaste, buckets, and mugs. These kits helped reduce the risk of disease in difficult living conditions.

A standout aspect of the relief effort was the dedication of Reliance employees in Assam. More than 50 staff members volunteered their time to assemble and distribute sanitation kits -- ensuring that even remote, flood-affected villages like Sarupathar in Nagaon district received support.

Reliance Foundation's work in Assam highlights the importance of acting quickly, working with local communities, and focusing on both immediate needs and long-term resilience. As the state begins to rebuild, efforts like these show how collaborative, people-first approaches can make a real difference in the lives of those hardest hit by natural disasters.

Reader Comments

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Rahul R
While I appreciate the efforts, why does it always take private companies to step in when our government systems fail? Assam floods happen every year but we still don't have permanent solutions. Good work Reliance, but our leaders need to do better.
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Aman W
The portable water filtration unit is brilliant! 💧 In my village during floods, we used to walk kilometers for clean water. More companies should invest in such innovative solutions for disaster-prone areas.
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Nisha Z
As someone from Assam, I've seen how floods destroy lives year after year. The livestock care camps are so important - for many families, their animals are their only assets. Thank you Reliance for understanding our real needs.
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Suresh O
The employee volunteering initiative is commendable. When corporate staff get personally involved, it creates deeper impact than just writing cheques. More companies should encourage such hands-on participation from their teams.
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David E
Visiting India during monsoon season showed me how devastating floods can be. The comprehensive approach here - from early warnings to hygiene kits - is textbook disaster response. Hope other states learn from this model.

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