Sea erosion drives Thrissur coastal residents up the ‘seawall’
The Hindu
With sea advancing incrementally, residents live in constant fear
Kowlathu Beevi, 56, has been living in a two-room house at Pookkanchery under Vadanappally panchayat, Thrissur, for the last 18 years. Her sister Thahira, husband and their 15-year-old son too live in the same house.
It was built at a cost of ₹35,000, an assistance they received from the panchayat after their thatched hut, close to the sea, was taken away by tidal waves. But with the sea advancing incrementally, she lives in constant fear.
“Dozens of houses get washed away each year,” says Ms. Beevi. Like most residents in the area, panic grips Ms. Beevi and her family when the waves rise and pound the beach.
“I don’t have a place to go if this house too falls. The water is already at our doorstep now. I underwent knee replacement surgery recently and my sister Thahira, who underwent brain surgery a few years ago, suffers from multiple ailments,” says Ms. Beevi whose husband left her a few years after their marriage. Thahira’s husband, a rag picker, is the only breadwinner of the family. But the incessant showers have rendered him jobless.
In Thrissur district, the coastal areas of Kodungallur and Chavakkad taluks bear the brunt of the furious sea during each monsoon.
“Construction of a seawall is the promise after every episode of sea erosion and it gets repeated time and again,” says Thahira, a resident of Fazal Road, Vadanappally. “Whenever the tidal waves enter our house, authorities would ask us to move to relief camps. How can we go to camps with appalling facilities with grown-up girls?” she asks.
“The seawall has collapsed partially, allowing the raging sea to destroy houses,” says Jameela of Sainuddin Nagar near Vadanappally.
The Madras High Court on Tuesday, June 11, 2024, permitted Anna University to deposit, in three monthly instalments, an amount of ₹73.23 lakh before the Central Government Industrial Tribunal (CGIT) as a condition to hear a statutory appeal preferred by the varsity against the Coimbatore Regional Provident Fund (RPF) Commissioner’s order to pay dues to the tune of ₹2.44 crore to contract employees.