homeeconomy NewsAgonising wait for Assam’s climate victims as rivers gobble homes, farmlands

Agonising wait for Assam’s climate victims as rivers gobble homes, farmlands

By Anup Sharma  Apr 19, 2019 5:33:50 PM IST (Published)


With the monsoon setting in, 69-year-old Rahim Khan is worried.
Monsoon rains swell the rivers in Assam and it worries people like Khan and lakhs of others who have been living along the riverbanks since generations. Although these people have learned to live with the waters, erosion of river banks continues to make them homeless and deprives them of their only livelihood option—agriculture.
Khan and his family, who were farmers tilling their land and cultivating different crops throughout the year, have now been reduced to mere daily wage earners. The 32 bighas of land the Khans used to own in Balapara char in Barpeta district, located about 100 kms from Assam’s capital town Guwahati, have already been eaten up by the hungry tides of Brahmaputra river. Bigha is a traditional unit for land measurement in India, equalling about 0.13 hectares.