|  | 
      
        | 
            
            
            
            
            
                       |   
          
          
          
          Patna, Aug 20 (IANS) Four years after Bihar's Kosi region was   ravaged by floods, an ambitious programme to rebuild a new-look Kosi region with   World Bank help is yet to show results with hundreds of thousands of victims   still fighting for survival, activists say.
 Thousands of acres of   cultivable land destroyed in 2008 in the Kosi region are still covered with   sand, activists said.
 
 |  
	  
	  
      
      
        
        The nature's fury hit hard hundreds of thousands. Many thousands of houses which   were washed away or damaged are yet to be built, the activists say.
 Much   of this was revealed Saturday at a Jan Sunwai (public hearing) here organised by   two voluntary organisations.
 
 Information acquired through the Right to   Information by activist Mahendra Yadav has revealed that about 14,129.70 acres   of cultivable land in Basantpur in Supaul district are still covered by   sand.
 
 The sand was brought in by the overflowing Kosi four years   ago.
 
 "This is enough to estimate how much cultivable land is still   covered by sand in Madhepura, Saharsa and Supaul districts," Yadav of the Kosi   Nav Nirman Manch said.
 
 Another activist, Ranjeev, complained that Chief   Minister Nitish Kumar's programme to rebuild a new-look Kosi region remained on   paper.
 
 "Four years have passed but hundreds of thousands of people are   still fighting for their survival in the Kosi region. Their demand to remove   deposit of sand from cultivable land and to construct houses have been   ignored."
 
 Ranjeev told IANS here that not more than five percent of the   houses were reconstructed in four years.
 
 "As per official records,   236,632 houses were washed away and damaged in the floods. The government   pledged to construct 100,000 houses with a World Bank loan. But not more than   5,000 houses have come up," said Ranjeev, who regularly visits   Kosi.
 
 "Four years is a long time as sand-filled cultivable land is   causing hardship to farmers," he said.
 
 An official of the state disaster   management department said the government was working on formulating a special   scheme for removing sand. He said farmers will be trained on farming ways in   sand-filled land.
 
 In May, Nitish Kumar admitted that sand deposits in   cultivable land was a major problem for farmers.
 
 On Aug 18, 2008, the   eastern Kosi embankment was breached, flooding five districts of northern   Bihar.
 
 Over three million people were rendered homeless when the Kosi   breached its bank upstream in Nepal and changed course. It was said to be the   worst flood in the state in 50 years.
 
 Ironically, a one-man commission   headed by Justice Rajesh Walia, set up Sep 10, 2008, to probe the cause of the   breach in Kusaha in Nepal, is yet to submit its report.
 
    
	
	
       |