Anger at Tajik authorities after floods

DUSHANBE, May 11, 2010, Asia-Plus – Search and rescue efforts are under way in Tajikistan”s southern Kulob region, where according to the authorities floods have killed at least 21 people, RFE/RL’s Tajik service reported on May 9. Emergency officials say dozens of people are still unaccounted for. RFE/RL correspondents in the city of Kulob say […]

RFE/RL

DUSHANBE, May 11, 2010, Asia-Plus – Search and rescue efforts are under way in Tajikistan”s southern Kulob region, where according to the authorities floods have killed at least 21 people, RFE/RL’s Tajik service reported on May 9.

Emergency officials say dozens of people are still unaccounted for.

RFE/RL correspondents in the city of Kulob say people are looking for their missing relatives and recovering bodies alongside the river.

Local residents have expressed anger at what they call the authorities” insufficient and belated response to the natural disaster that hit in the early hours of May 7.

Two days since the floods hit, locals say they haven”t received food, dry clothes, or medical assistance. Kulob, a city of around 100,000 people, also faces a severe shortage of clean drinking water.

Asliddin Dostiev, a Kulob resident, says “emergency teams arrived late and without any equipment to rescue people and without any tents to shelter people.”

Muhammadjon Sharifov, a Kulob resident who has lost his mother in the flood, says many lives would have been saved if emergency services arrived on time.  “My mother, sister, and nephews were sleeping in one room. I was in another when the flood came. I rescued the small children, then I saw my mother”s body floating in the water,” Sharifov says. “Emergency services and officials arrived only after eight o”clock. But even then they didn”t do much to help. ”We can”t do anything, our clothes might get muddy,” they told us.”

Another local affected by the disaster, Ahmad Ibrohimov, said that “people are helping each other, some bringing food, others bringing warm clothes.”

Officials from Tajikistan”s Emergency Situations Ministry told RFE/RL”s Tajik Service that the committee teams in the area “are making a list of missing people, a list of victims, and evacuating residents to safe locations.”

According to official figures, more than 1,500 houses, several schools, and offices have been completely or partially destroyed in Kulob and surrounding villages. Flood waters have also destroyed 12 bridges. 

An RFE/RL correspondent in Kulob, Mumin Ahmadi, says that local people fear that “actual casualty numbers are much higher than the official version.”  “Residents say they have buried more than 50 bodies of those killed by floods.  Some 60-70 people are still missing and feared dead. People say their bodies remain under rocks or have been driven away by flood waters,” Ahmadi says.

Oxfam and the International Committee of the Red Cross have reportedly begun to deliver emergency aid including tents, warm clothes, and hot meals.

Kulob authorities receive some $2.5million every year for “taking measures to minimize flood damage,” but Tajikistan”s anticorruption agency has said that much of that money is lost due to “corruption.”

Join us on social media!

Article translations:

Related Article

Оби зулол
Tenisi
Оби зулол

Most Read

Коммерсбонк Точикистон

Recent Articles

Major global investment companies show interest in Tajikistan’s economy

Among them are J.P. Morgan, Loomis Sayles & Company, Morgan Stanley Investment Management, and Global Evolution.

President Rahmon awarded UN University for Peace Certificate of Recognition

He is awarded for "significant contribution to establishing peace, developing regional cooperation, and strengthening mutual understanding between peoples."

Starlink satellite internet becomes available in Kyrgyzstan

And in Tajikistan, it was launched in February of this year.

In Dushanbe, 30 more new electric buses start operating

Each is designed to carry 100 passengers and can travel up to 300 kilometers without recharging.

Who is the man who “increased the Aryan race” and told the President of Tajikistan about it?

Kozie Koziyev, a folk craftsman, built dozens of houses, participated in the construction of a mosque and a kindergarten in Matcha, raised 11 children, and created a true dynasty of builders.

Tajik leader discusses water, climate, and global security issues with UN Deputy Secretaries-General

The parties paid special attention to the "Dushanbe Water Process," parliamentary diplomacy, and the peaceful resolution of conflicts.

Tajikistan completes the spring military draft target ahead of schedule

There is still a week left until the end of the conscription campaign.

Custodian of non-written languages and builder of academic bridges; philologist Khusrav Shambezoda turns 70

He could have devoted himself exclusively to the study of classical heritage, but he chose the challenging path of preserving the living word — and Tajik-Russian science gained in him a brilliant sociolinguist whose name became synonymous with dedication.

Tajikistan ranks among the top three leading trade reformers in Europe and Central Asia

The country has shown progress in the digitalization of trade procedures, the reduction of paper barriers, and the enhancement of transparency for exporters.

China to send workers to Tajikistan for modernization of the Kulma BCP

This is the only land border crossing point between Tajikistan and China.