1993 India floods
![]() a view of River Sutlej in Rupnagar, Punjab, India | |
Date | July 1993 |
---|---|
Location | Punjab Assam Bihar West Bengal Haryana Jammu and Kashmir Himachal Pradesh Gujarat |
Cause | Heavy rain Landslide Severe weather |
Deaths | 530–550 |
Property damage | unknown |
The 1993 India floods[1] was a deadly flood caused by several days long heavy monsoon rains and severe weather that occurred in July 1993 across eight states in the north of the country. Severe floods left 530 fatalities and millions people went homeless, including from Haryana. Punjab with 350 deaths was the most affected state where "1.2 million acres of crops" were extensively damaged, mostly from Patiala, north-western region of the state. Flash floods swept away major railway tracks, roads, and bridges, leading to disrupt the communications between the northeastern states and the rest of the country. Initial reports cited one hundred deaths in Gujarat.

It is believed floods swept away more than one hundred cattle from the affected areas. Ajnala town of Amritsar district in Punjab also suffered a heavy loss where floods washed away a large number of the villages.[2][3]
Background

Heavy floods caused by monsoon rains during the months of June and July leaves several fatalities with millions of worth property damage. However, rainwater is recognized one of the main sources of irrigation in the country as it provides water to agricultural crops like other countries.[4][2]
On 7 July 1993, heavy monsoon caused flash floods and landslides, leading to extensive damage to human lives, crops, livestock, and housing across the seven to eight states in India such as
Emergency response
The state governments as well as union government mobilised more than 5,000 army personnel in rescue operations to combat the disaster by evacuating people from 1,500 affected villages. Army along with police and NGOs were actively involved in relief dispatch, technical rescue as well as in emergency medical services. Government also mobilised air force in an effort to airdrop food, medicine and blankets to the flood victims.[5]
Aftermath
Extreme volume of water in several rivers caused floods killing more than 530 people and damaged crops, including rice,
References
- ^ "No lesson learnt from 1993 floods - Chandigarh News". The Times of India. 8 September 2008. Retrieved 1 May 2020.
- ^ a b c d "Monsoon Floods Kill 983 in Asia" – via www.washingtonpost.com.
- ^ a b Sandhu, K.; August 15, 1993. "Official neglect compounds misery of Punjab flood-hit". India Today.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ISBN 9789054107743– via Google Books.
- ^ a b c "India Floods 16 Jul 1993 UN DHA Information Reports 1 - 5 - India". ReliefWeb.
- ^ "1993 Flood Archive". Dartmouth College. 12 December 2000. Archived from the original on 18 February 2020. Retrieved 1 May 2020.
- ^ Gargan, Edward A. (July 23, 1993). "Indian Monsoon Brings Floods and Landslides; Death Toll Is 500". The New York Times.