Ramban (J-K): Forced to leave their homes damaged due to land subsidence, the residents of Pernote village in this hilly district of Jammu and Kashmir are concerned about their future and want adequate compensation to rebuild their lives.
Over 58 houses in the village developed cracks since Thursday evening amid land sinking that left behind a trail of destruction, severely damaging four electricity towers, a receiving station and a section of the road connecting the Gool sub-division with the Ramban headquarters.
The land subsidence is still continuing amid incessant rains, also threatening over two dozen remaining houses, while hundreds of acres of agricultural land also suffered the brunt of the natural calamity, the cause of which is being investigated by geology experts.
The district administration has already relocated over 500 people to safer places and also started the assessment of damages on war-footing to facilitate speedy release of compensation to victim families under State Disaster Response Force (SDRF) norms.
The village, having a mixed population of Muslims and Hindus, saw people helping each other during the testing times. "We lost everything in a matter of a few hours when cracks started developing in our homes on Thursday evening. We fled to save our lives, leaving everything behind," Mohd Iqbal Katoch, a local resident, told PTI.
Katoch, heading a family of eight, said as he returned home from work around 5 pm on Thursday, his children informed him about a one-and-a-half feet crack developing in their compound.
"I called my neighbour Deepak Kumar and we immediately shifted to safety," he said. Eleven-year-old Kartik Kumar, a Class 3 student, said all his school books and shoes were gone as they had to leave in a hurry after their house developed massive cracks.
"We have no extra clothes to wear," he said. Anju Devi, a middle-aged woman putting up at a relief camp inside the community hall at Maitra here, said it takes one's whole life to build a house and it is "very painful" when you see it collapsing before your eyes.
"We left with what we were wearing; rest had gone, swallowed by the earth," Devi said as she urged the government to look into their plight and provide them land and money to rebuild their homes.
"We are concerned about the future of our children. We are farmers but nothing is left with us as our land has also gone," she said. Feroz Khan was all praise for the district administration for promptly responding to the crisis and providing all possible assistance to the affected families.