Scuffles between various groups of flood victims have been witnessed in Mehjoor Nagar, Rambagh, Jawahar Nagar and some other areas of the city over rice bags and other material being brought by relief trucks.
"This has become a norm now. The stronger people get majority of the relief material while the weaker persons get a trickle," Naseema, an elderly lady, told PTI at Mehjoor Nagar.
Various Sikh families taking refuge in the Gurudwara Shaheed Bunga at Barzulla Bagat have alleged large-scale irregularities in relief distribution by the Gurudwara management here.
She alleged that the relief material sent by various Sikh organisations was being dumped in the houses of the office bearers of the Gurudwara committee and those of their relatives.
"To monitor and keep a check on irregularities, some members of our team will stay here in the Gurudwara to monitor the distribution of the relief being sent by Delhi Sikh Gurudwara Management Committee (DGMC)," Paramjeet Singh Chandok, a member DGMC, said.
"We have a group of volunteers who have been at the forefront of rescue mission right from day one of the floods in Srinagar. We have entrusted the relief distribution to them and it has been a smooth sailing," Ghulam Mohammad, a resident of Barzulla, said.
The state government has also directed the employees of various departments to report for work but, so far, it has not been able to mobilize them in the numbers required to meet such a huge challenge.
Meanwhile, Union Home Secretary Anil Goswami has been monitoring and coordinating relief and rescue work in flood-ravaged Kashmir Valley for the last six days, operating from his makeshift office at Srinagar's Technical Airport.
Goswami, a 1978 batch IAS officer from Jammu and Kashmir Cadre, has been holding dozen-odd meetings with officials of Army, Indian Air Force and state government about the ongoing relief and rescue work.
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