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Lessons from nature’s fury

Lack of early warning, delayed response have become talking points; while natural calamities can’t be stopped, a long-term action plan is needed to minimise loss of lives and property in landslides and floods

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Rescuers carry the body of a landslide victim at Taliye near Mahad. Pic/AFP

Rescuers carry the body of a landslide victim at Taliye near Mahad. Pic/AFP

By Sunday afternoon, about 150 people had died across the state, mostly on either side of the Sahyadri ranges, in rain-related incidents.

Dharmendra JoreOver 100 people were reported missing. Landslides in three districts of Raigad, Ratnagiri and Satara had claimed 74 lives. The horror of a landslide that had buried the entire village Malin in Pune district in the Monsoon of 2014 was revived in village Taliye near Mahad where over 40 bodies have been recovered so far. Many are still missing. With the loss of lives and irreparable damages to the property and food stocks, the livelihood is expected to hit hard in the future, especially in the coastal belt of Konkan where tragedies have struck thrice in a span of 15 months. The beautiful region was struck by a cyclone last year when the coronavirus had just announced its arrival, and this year, it was another cyclone that turned paradise into hell, and now it is the fury of floods and landslides.

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