
Landslide threat: More families to be relocated from vulnerable spots in Kerala’s Kozhikode district
The Hindu
Kerala disaster management authority relocates families from landslide-prone areas in Kozhikode district amid intensified action and cooperation.
The disaster management authority has initiated measures to shift more families from the landslide-prone upland areas of Kozhikode district in Kerala. Intensified action comes in the wake of the multiple incidents of landslides which affected various villages under Thamarassery and Vadakara taluks in Kozhikode district.
People who earlier expressed unwillingness to cooperate with the relocation requests have been found responding positively to the call in the wake of the emergency situation. Vanimel panchayat is reportedly having the highest number of families affected by the recent incidents of landslides and flash floods. On July 30 alone, 13 houses were destroyed in landslips.
“We have requested the support of various youth organisations and neighbourhood groups to identify and report the details of families which live in the risky areas. Arrangements are in place to provide them temporary accommodation,” said a local body member from Vanimel.
He said all the nearby local grama panchayats had adopted a similar approach to mitigate the impact of natural calamities.
In Kozhikode district, rural areas such as Kattippara, Narippatta, Kavilumpara, Kayakkodi, Chakkittappara, Thiruvambadi and Kodencheri are highly vulnerable to landslides and flooding. Revenue department sources confirm that the local administrators and disaster management teams are in touch with the residents in vulnerable areas to request their cooperation for a temporary relocation.
A few years ago, a Geological Survey of India team led by Rahul Kumar Chaurasia and Zameer Ahmed had also conducted studies in the district about the reasons behind recurring landslides during the south-west monsoon season. It was part of the preparation of a detailed map of landslide-prone areas with the support of domain experts from various States. The study was initiated as two major landslides in 2018 claimed the lives of 16 persons in Kozhikode’s Karincholamala and Kannappankundu.
There were also initiatives from the Centre for Water Resources Development and Management to conduct field-level studies in the affected areas and come up with a flood map for the reference of disaster management authorities. The efforts were made in coordination with experts from the department dealing with remote-sensing and the Kerala State Disaster Management Authority (KSDMA). They had also suggested immediate implementation of buffer zones around natural drainages and afforestation programmes.

Former CM B.S. Yediyurappa had challenged the first information report registered on March 14, 2024, on the alleged incident that occurred on February 2, 2024, the chargesheet filed by the Criminal Investigation Department (CID), and the February 28, 2025, order of taking cognisance of offences afresh by the trial court.