City
Epaper

Flood Situation in Bangladesh Not Due to Release of Waters From Indian Dam on Gumti River: MEA

By ANI | Updated: August 22, 2024 12:33 IST

New Delhi [India], August 22: The Ministry of External Affairs on Thursday clarified that the opening of the Dumbur ...

Open in App

New Delhi [India], August 22: The Ministry of External Affairs on Thursday clarified that the opening of the Dumbur dam upstream of the Gumti River in Tripura has not caused the current flood situation in districts on Bangladesh's eastern borders."We would like to point out that the catchment areas of Gumti River that flows through India and Bangladesh have witnessed the heaviest rains of this year over the last few days," the MEA said in a release.It also mentioned that the catchment areas of the Gumti River that flows through India and Bangladesh have witnessed the heaviest rains of this year over the last few days. The flood in Bangladesh is primarily due to waters from these large catchments downstream of the dam.

The Ministry also asserted that the Dumbur dam is located quite far from the border - over 120 Km upstream of Bangladesh. It is a low-height (about 30m) dam that generates power that feeds into a grid from which Bangladesh also draws 40 MW of power from Tripura."Along the about 120 Km river course, we have three water level observation sites at Amarpur, Sonamura, and Sonamura 2. Heavy rainfall has been continuing since 21 August in the whole of Tripura and adjoining districts of Bangladesh. In the event of heavy inflow, automatic releases have been observed," it said."Amarpur station is in part of a bilateral protocol under which we are transmitting real-time flood data to Bangladesh," it added.

Also Read|Heavy Rains, Flooding Kill 114 in War-Torn Sudan Since June: Health Ministry

It also pointed out that data showing a rising trend has been supplied to Bangladesh up to 1500 hrs on August 21. At 1800 hrs, due to flooding, there was a power outage leading to problems in communication. Still, we have tried to maintain communication through other means created for urgent transmission of data."Floods on the common rivers between India and Bangladesh are a shared problem inflicting suffering to people on both sides and requires close cooperation towards resolving them. As two countries sharing 54 common cross-border rivers, river water cooperation is an important part of our bilateral engagement. We remain committed to resolving issues and mutual concerns in water resources and river water management through bilateral consultations and technical discussions," the MEA added.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: bangladeshInternational newsFloodHeavy RainsMinistry Of External Affairs
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalDubai Marina Building Fire: 67-Storey Skyscraper Blaze Controlled After Six Hours, No Injuries Reported (Watch Video)

InternationalIsrael-Iran War Sends Oil Prices Soaring, Supply Chain at Risk

InternationalIsrael-Iran War: Iran Closes Airspace 'Until Further Notice' as Tensions Soar; IndiGo, Air India Reroute Flights and Issue Travel Advisories

InternationalIsrael-Iran Conflict: From Sirens to Strikes Here Are the Top 10 Key Updates

InternationalMassive Missile Strike Escalates Tensions Between Iran and Israel, 34 Injured in Tel Aviv

International Realted Stories

InternationalIndian students being relocated to safer places in Iran amid escalating tensions: MEA

International5th largest economy, digital revolution, manufacturing mission: PM Modi highlights New Delhi's prowess at India-Cyprus CEO Forum

InternationalIsrael intercepted over 100 UAVs sent by Iran, says IDF

International"Continuously monitoring security situation, engaging Indian students in Iran to ensure their safety": MEA

InternationalCyprus greets India with 'Vande Mataram' over PM Modi's visit to Mediterranean nation