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"Our village will most certainly be washed away if it rains," says Prem Singh Rana, his voice choking at the memory of the Himalayan deluge that left over 200 dead in Uttarakhand's Chamoli district last year.
The 40-year-old, who lost his 75-year-old mother to the disaster, is a resident of Raini village – home to Gaura Devi of the 'Chipko Movement.'
Overlooking the Nanda Devi range, the village stands just above the ruins of the Rishiganga Hydro Power Project, which vanished just seconds after gushing waters hit its concrete walls.
But even after being marked as an unsafe village and a year after being ravaged by the flash floods, residents of Raini are yet to be rehabilitated by the state government.
On the morning of 7 February 2021, Godambari Devi and her 75-year-old mother-in-law Amrita Devi had walked down to their field near the bridge. The weather was clear and the duo went about collecting leaves from the trees they had planted under a government scheme.
They had barely started working, when Godambari heard a strange noise.
While Godambari was swept aside by the winds towards her village, her mother-in-law couldn't move from where she was. "I didn't see her after that day," she says.
The family kept looking for the 75-year-old for a month, before the government declared over 100 people missing in the incident as dead.
The flashfloods were caused by a temporary lake that was formed following an avalanche, says Professor YP Sundriyal, who has extensively studied the 2021 disaster.
The avalanche had also blocked the Rishiganga river, leading to the creation of a dam at its confluence with the Ronthi stream – a fact that was discovered by a research scholar under the Professor a couple of days after the disaster.
While the flash floods killed over 200 – a majority of them working as labourers at the twin NTPC projects – it also disturbed the slope on which Raini village stands.
Infact, in August 2021, a team of experts had suggested that residents Raini be rehabilitated elsewhere as it had become "vulnerable and required adequate slope stabilization," reported news agency PTI.
Weakened by tremors generated from the flashfloods, the slope showed signs of further signs of trouble in October 2021, when villagers discovered large cracks on their walls and their fields.
While residents say that the government has done little to rehabilitate them, the Chamoli district administration says that the paucity of government land has led to delays in shifting residents from the now vulnerable Raini village, which is also affected by erosion.
Till the government looks for a suitable land, the "villagers can buy their own land within Uttarakhand, on which they will be given a subsidy as per the state's rehabilitation policy," Himanshu Khurana, District Magistrate, Chamoli told The Quint.
While Khurana assured that the administration is doing its best to find available land, those vulnerable at Raini fear the worst.
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