KATHMANDU, August 13: Melamchi Bazaar and adjoining areas in Sindhupalchowk district suffered a massive loss due to heavy rains that resulted in landslides and rampant river erosion.
A team of experts from the Department of Mines and Geology was sent for a study in the Melamchi Bazaar which was hit by the devastating floods on June 15 and July 31.
The team comprising Department’s senior divisional geologist Shiva Kumar Baskota and geologist Gautam Prasad Khanal had been in Melamchi and Helambu area from August 6 to 19 to find out the cause (s) of the disaster there.
Floods started from the influence of Pemdang Stream and Melamchi Stream following the incessant rains on June 15 got blocked at one point of the Melamchi River and it turned more violent as it got mixed with landslide deposition, causing further river erosion. As a result, the Melamchi Bazaar and adjoining settlement suffered a significant loss, according to senior divisional geologist Baskota.
Eight villages at high risk of Seti River erosion
Indrawati, Melamchi, Pemdang, Larke and Yangri Rivers which flow through the Melamchi Bazaar are the Himalayan rivers. The floods had their serious implications in Chanaute Bazaar, Kiul Bazaar, the center of Helambu rural municipality, Ambathan, Timbu, and Gyalthum.
The June 15 flood in the Pemdang River had led to the accumulation of sediment up to 10 meters at Bhemathang Chaur (ground) in Helambu. The sediment is measured at 10 million cubic meters, the department said. The length of the ground is 1,500 meters while the width is 700 meters.
"The deposition of 10 meters thick sediment over that ground makes clear the sheer size of the precipitation and flooding in that area," Senior Divisional Geologist Baskota said. The Bhemathang pitch which was filled with sediment on June 15 has been eroded by the heavy rainfall on July 31.
According to him, the massive flooding in Melamchi on July 31 was triggered due to the erosion of 100 meters of the Bhemathang pitch.
Another reason for the massive damage in Melamchi Bazaar is the flooding caused by the Indrawati river. More damage was caused in the area due to the flooding by the swollen Indrawati river. The study conducted by the Department of Mines and Geology showed that the flooded Yangrikhola and Larkekhola rivulets which join the Indrawati also contributed to the damage,
Department's Director-General Ram Prasad Ghimire said the conclusion of the geological study carried out in the Melamchi and Helambu would be handed to the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Authority (NDRRMA) under the Ministry of Home Affairs.
"It is necessary to conduct the geological study of all areas and not just Melamchi and Helambu so as to prevent such incidents from occurring again in the coming days," DG Ghimire said.
More than a dozen people lost their lives due to the flooding on June 15 and July 31 in Helambu and Melamchi while billions of rupees worth of physical infrastructures were destroyed. About a dozen RCC and other bridges were damaged in the disaster-stricken areas.
There are currently hundreds of houses near the bank of the Melamchi rivulet that are at risk of floods and landslides. Although the government assigned a two-member team from the Department for carrying out the geological study of Melamchi and Helambu areas, the NDRRMA under the Home Ministry has also mobilized three employees for assessing the disaster risk in that area.
(With Inputs from RSS)