In Assam’s Karimganj, Residents Are Forced To Source Drinking Water From Puddles
In Assam’s Karimganj, Residents Are Forced To Source Drinking Water From Puddles

In Assam’s Karimganj, Residents Are Forced To Source Drinking Water From Puddles

Residents across various villages in Assam’s Karimganj district cannot remember a time when they drank clean, fresh water. For the longest time, villagers from Oilamcherra, Ping Cherra, Gopalpur, Belala and Mirjanagar, to name a few villages, have been dependent on rivulets and puddles of muddy water for daily use.

Inevitably, generations of families across these villages have been affected by water-borne diseases like dysentery, cholera, diarrhoea, and more. There are very few villagers who have hope that the situation will change sometime in the near future.

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Farook Ahmed, 37, is a resident of Taltola, a village around 70 km from one of Assam’s bigger towns, Silchar. Taltola comprises about 8,000 – 9,000 residents, who barely make a living as farmers and daily wage workers. Ahmed says, “We don’t have any option but to collect water from ponds, puddles or tube wells in neighbouring villages”.

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