CM Himanta thanks community clubs for CMRF donations

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CM Himanta thanks community clubs for CMRF donations

Synopsis

Two Assam community organisations — Bamakhata 1 No. Tarun Sangha and United Club, Kenduguri, and Udyam Social Development Foundation, Kakodonga — donated ₹1.51 lakh and ₹10,000 respectively to the Chief Minister's Relief Fund on 24 June 2026. CM Himanta Biswa Sarma acknowledged and thanked both donors.

Key Takeaways

Tarun Sangha and United Club, Kenduguri donated ₹1.51 lakh to the Chief Minister's Relief Fund on 24 June 2026 .
Udyam Social Development Foundation, Kakodonga contributed ₹10,000 to the same fund on the same date.
The handover took place at Lok Sewa Bhawan , the official seat of the Assam government in Guwahati.
Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma personally appreciated the donors and conveyed his gratitude.
The Chief Minister's Relief Fund is deployed primarily for immediate disaster relief, including during Assam's annual monsoon floods.
Community donations to the CMRF form part of a broader pattern of public-private cooperation in Assam's disaster response framework.

The Chief Minister's Office of Assam announced on Wednesday, 24 June 2026 that two community organisations made contributions to the Chief Minister's Relief Fund at Lok Sewa Bhawan in Guwahati, with Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma personally acknowledging and thanking the donors.

Context

Bamakhata 1 No. Tarun Sangha and United Club, Kenduguri contributed ₹1.51 lakh to the fund, while Udyam Social Development Foundation, Kakodonga donated ₹10,000. The Chief Minister's Office described the gesture as an act of community welfare, noting that HCM appreciated the support and conveyed his gratitude to both organisations.

The contributions were received at Lok Sewa Bhawan, the seat of the Assam government, underscoring the formal, institutional nature of the handover.

Policy Backdrop

The Chief Minister's Relief Fund (CMRF) is a long-standing state mechanism used to channel public and institutional donations toward immediate relief for victims of natural disasters, particularly the annual monsoon floods that affect large parts of Assam along the Brahmaputra valley. Assam governments have maintained the fund for decades, with utilisation typically peaking during and after the flood season.

Across India, state governments routinely receive and publicise donations from community clubs and non-governmental organisations into CM relief funds to supplement official disaster response budgets. In Assam, this pattern is especially visible during the monsoon period, when local bodies step in to address recurring floods and riverbank erosion.

Stakeholders and Impact

Community organisations such as local youth clubs and social development foundations represent a grassroots layer of welfare delivery in Assam. Their contributions, even when modest in absolute terms, are framed by the state government as examples of public participation in disaster preparedness and relief.

Flood-affected residents across districts benefit indirectly from these pooled contributions, as the CMRF is deployed to provide immediate assistance — including food, shelter, and rehabilitation support — during emergencies. The involvement of named local clubs also serves to encourage similar contributions from peer organisations.

What's Next

With the 2026 monsoon season under way, the CMRF is expected to see continued inflows from community organisations across Assam's districts. Utilisation reports and distribution announcements from the fund will be closely watched as indicators of the state's disaster response capacity this year.

The state government's practice of publicly acknowledging each contribution signals an intent to sustain this culture of community giving, potentially encouraging larger donations from corporate and civil society actors as flood conditions evolve.

Point of View

Where the Brahmaputra's annual cycle strains government resources, this approach broadens the perceived ownership of disaster relief beyond the bureaucracy. It also positions CM Himanta Biswa Sarma as personally accessible and grateful — a soft-power gesture that costs little but builds civic goodwill ahead of the peak monsoon months. The pattern, replicated across Indian states, increasingly blurs the line between genuine community mobilisation and state-managed optics.
NationPress
25 Jun 2026

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Chief Minister's Relief Fund in Assam?
The Chief Minister's Relief Fund (CMRF) is a state government fund that collects public and institutional donations to provide immediate assistance to victims of natural disasters, especially floods, in Assam. It has been maintained by successive Assam governments for decades.
Who donated to the Assam CMRF on 24 June 2026?
Bamakhata 1 No. Tarun Sangha and United Club, Kenduguri donated ₹1.51 lakh, and Udyam Social Development Foundation, Kakodonga donated ₹10,000 to the Chief Minister's Relief Fund on 24 June 2026.
How can organisations donate to the Assam Chief Minister's Relief Fund?
Organisations and individuals can donate to the Assam CMRF by visiting Lok Sewa Bhawan in Guwahati or through official state government channels designated for relief fund contributions.
What does the Assam CMRF money get used for?
The CMRF is primarily used to provide immediate relief — including food, shelter, and rehabilitation — to people affected by floods, erosion, and other natural disasters in Assam, particularly during the annual monsoon season.
Who is the Chief Minister of Assam in 2026?
Himanta Biswa Sarma has been the Chief Minister of Assam since May 2021 and continues to hold that office in 2026, overseeing state welfare and disaster relief measures including the CMRF.
Nation Press
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