Kerala floods | Rains relent; flight operations begin at Naval airbase in Kochi

A man carries rescue materials from a military helicopter in Chenagannur, Kerala. (Photo: AFP)


With the rain fury finally abating on Sunday, and skies clearing up, relief operations have picked up momentum in Kerala. While many people have returned to their homes, over 7 lakh are still lodged in the nearly 5,600 camps in Kerala following “one of the worst ever floods”. The Kerala floods have left nearly 370 people dead and caused unprecedented destruction.

Meanwhile, even as the Cochin International Airport is still submerged, commercial flight operations started in Kochi on Monday morning after the Naval base was opened to passenger flights. An Air India flight from Bengaluru landed around 8 am. Domestic air operations were resumed at the Naval base on Monday after 18 years, following a trial run on Sunday.

The Alliance Air of Air India will be operating a total of eight flights on Monday to from from the Kochi Naval air base. All these planes have a seating capacity of 70. While there will be two Bengaluru-Kochi and two Kochi-Bengaluru flights during the day, AI will also fly flights between Kochi and Coimbatore.

 

Union Civil Aviation Minister Suresh Prabhu congratulated Air India for the service.

He tweeted: “Congratulations to team @airindiain. 1st scheduled flight lands at Cochin INS Garuda (the alternate site for Cochin Airport) from Bangalore with 70+ passengers.”

On Sunday morning, the authorities withdrew the red alert issued in the last of the three districts: Idukki, Ernakulam and Pathanamthitta.

There were only moderate rains in a few districts. With fishermen, NCC, Navy and Air Force continuing to rescue the marooned, Sunday saw the maximum evacuation of people from Chengannur, Pandalam, Thiruvalla, several areas in Pathanamthitta district and in Aluva, Angamaly and Paravur in Ernakulam.

READ | How and where you can donate to help Kerala

“Our prime concern was to save lives. It appears it has been met,” Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan told the media Sunday amid signs that the most destructive phase of the floods had ended and that water overflowing numerous towns and villages had started to recede.

“It is perhaps one of the worst ever tragedies. Hence the loss caused is so huge. So we will accept all help,” he said, revealing the extent of a tragedy which has not hit the state since 1924.

But even as Vijayan maintained that the last stage of rescue act was going on, various WhatsApp groups continued to be flooded with requests for help, especially from Alappuzha. The chief minister said 22,034 people had been rescued from flooded homes and buildings.

Reports of deaths started being reported from May 29 when Kerala got the first of the monsoon rains. But the bulk of the fatalities were reported after August 9, when a tragedy of unprecedented proportion gripped the state after sluice gates of several rain-filled dams were opened.

Kerala and Tamil Nadu Fire Force personnel carry children on their shoulders through flood waters during a rescue operation in Annamanada village in Thrissur district of Kerala. (Photo: AFP)

 

Vijayan said the next task would be to help people get back to normal life.

“Rehabilitation will be done by various agencies,” he said, and pledged that all towns and cities would be cleaned on a war footing.

Vijayan paid special tributes to Kerala’s famed fishermen who played a key role in rescuing hundreds and navigating through dangerous waters.

Every fisherman who took part in the rescue act would be given Rs 3,000 each, he said. “We will always be grateful for their support and help.”

Students who lost their educational materials and uniforms will get new replacements.

Rains in the catchment areas of the big dams in Idukki district have subsided and the authorities have shut two of the five floodgates at the Idukki dam. The outflow of water from both the Mullaperiyar and Idukki dams has also reduced. As a result, the water flow into the Periyar and its tributaries that flow through Ernakulam and Thrissur has come down.

On Sunday, the Kottayam sector operated special passenger trains. The state-run Kerala State Road Transport Corp also restarted operations on the MC Road to Kottayam.

But it is not as if all was going on smoothly.

Health minister K K Shailaja said though the water level had fallen in many areas, medical facilities might not have reached certain regions due to the magnitude of the crisis.

“This is because medical professionals found it difficult to reach the affected areas… We need a huge quantity of medicines. A major health drive is being planned to prevent communicable diseases,” she said.

And with the water level coming down, it might not be possible to operate the big boats, forcing rescuers to rely on small or rubber boats. But even as help poured into Kerala from all over the country and abroad, some vendors made a killing because of food shortages. Green chillies, even after police intervention, was selling at Rs 120 a kg in Kochi.

Onions, potatoes and cabbage were sold at Rs 90 a kg. The retail cost of rice andsugar shot up by Rs 15.

Some people who reached their homes in central Kerala were stunned after seeing mud and dirt accumulated on furniture, with practically all their possessions destroyed.