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Torrential rains and flooding hit Indias financial centre
By Ram Kumar
8 August 2005
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Torrential rains and flooding have had a devastating impact
on Mumbai (Bombay), Indias financial capital, and surrounding
areas over the last week. The death toll has climbed to more than
1,000 and tens of thousands more than been left homeless. Overwhelmingly,
the worst affected have been the poor from the citys slums
and from outlying rural villages.
The monsoonal rains began on July 26, when an unprecedented
76 centimetres of rain fell in just 24 hours, devastating the
citys inadequate infrastructure. Flooding and landslides
cut roads and rail and snapped electricity and power lines. The
international airport was only partially operational,
with a number of airlines being forced to cancel flights.
Tens of thousands of people were stranded for hours or compelled
to wade through water to get home. Some died in submerged cars.
Ground-floor apartments were flooded. The carcasses of thousands
of dead animals littered the streets. The narrow alleyways in
the shantytowns, where between a third and a half of the citys
population of 15 million live, were turned into raging torrents.
In the Saki Naka area, a massive landslide swept away 135 huts,
killing several people.
The lack of clean drinking water has raised fears of an epidemic
of water-borne diseases. Biju Mathew, a World Vision India (WVI)
representative, told the media: Anti-diarrhoeal and anti-malarial
medicines used to prevent water-borne diseases are not available.
These medicines are needed as there could be a disease outbreak.
Another WVI official Reena Samuel explained that many people had
lost all their provisions in the floods and were in urgent need
of emergency rations.
Areas near Mumbai have also been hard hit. About 14,000 passengers
were stranded at railway stations in the Nandurbar district due
to flooding at the Mumbai end of the line. Several trains were
sent back to their originating points on July 27. Milk tankers
as well as vegetable trucks could not reach Mumbai as the main
Mumbai-Agra national highway was flooded near the Shahapur area.
The BBC reported that 22 people died in the village of Diva
and another 10,000 lost their homes and paddy fields. What
we have now is whats left on our bodies, one villager
said.
In the Satara district, 50 villages were cut off after authorities
were compelled to open all 10 floodgates of the Koyana dam because
of the heavy rain in the catchment area. Floodwaters submerged
roads and bridges in the Patan and Karad areas.
An estimated 20 million people across the state of Maharashtra
have been affected by the flooding. Damage to industry, agriculture
and infrastructure is put at between $US700 and $2.8 billion.
The slow response of state and national governments to the crisis
has provoked angry demonstrations by victims who have been left
without food, water, shelter and other essentials.
Thousands of men, women and children staged 24-hour rasta
rokos (blocking highways) at more than 16 places in Mumbai
to protest over the lack of assistance. Residents from the government
settlement in Bandra marched to the local government offices on
July 27 after local authorities failed to carry out their promise
to restore water supplies. The citys police commissioner
A.N. Roy warned Maharashtra Chief Minister Vilasrao Deshmukh that
the situation could get out of hand if the power supplies were
not restored.
An article in the Hindustan Times on August 2 commented:
The spontaneous response of over 5,000 angry residents of
Kurla, facing acute problems of electricity and clean water for
five days, was indeed befitting. It was, indeed, shameful that
people at the helm of affairs in the city did little to mitigate
the sufferings of the poor and disadvantaged citizens affected
by the heavy downpour last week. The rasta roko and dharnas by
the citizens of Kurla is a signal to all the powers-be that enough
is enough. That limits of tolerance have been crossed and
the common man cannot take things lying down meekly.
A group of filmmakers and media personalities, including filmmaker
Mahesh Bhatt and director Vinta Nanda, has announced public interest
litigation against the state government over its failures during
the floods. Bhat told the press: We are punished if we dont
do our duty of paying taxes. Why should the government not be
punishable if it neglects its duty?
Poorly planned development
Chief Minister Deshmukh acknowledged last week that the
machinery was not as effective but tried to brush off criticisms
by declaring we have learnt our lessons. Indian Prime
Minister Manmohan Singh, whose Congress Party is a partner in
the state government, also tried to deflect opposition, praising
the residents for bearing a lot of personal distress in
silence. He toured Mumbai a week ago and promised $500 million
in assistance to upgrade the citys drainage system.
Both governments have been seeking to promote Mumbai as a go-ahead
economic and financial centre capable of rivalling Indias
global rivals. Deshmukh once declared that Shanghai should be
the benchmark for Mumbais development. But it
is precisely this anarchic economic development that has led to
an explosion of poorly planned construction that has strained
Mumbais antiquated infrastructure to the limit.
City authorities were responsible for bulldozing large areas
of slums earlier this year, leaving an estimated 400,000 people
homeless, in order to make way for further development. The displaced
were among the hardest hit by the flooding. In the aftermath,
state water resources minister Ajit Pawar blamed slum dwellers
for clogging the drains with rubbish and called for fresh demolition
drives.
However, as social activist Medha Patkar explained: Everybody,
media to the ministers, blames slum-dwellers for blocked drains,
but the municipal engineers, after preliminary surveys, have acknowledged
that the real cause is large scale construction activity which
should not have been undertaken without first providing for adequate
drainage.
An article in the New York Times pointed to some of
the underlying causes: Mangrove swamps, which act as natures
bathtub during the rainy season, have been built over. A river
that once allowed storm water to be carried down to the Arabian
Sea has been pinched by the construction of a road to connect
a northern suburb to midtown Mumbai.
The Mumbai drainage system was built over a century ago, during
the period of British colonial rule. According to city municipal
commissioner Johny Joseph, a plan for a $3 billion upgrade has
been put been put before the national government but has not yet
been approved.
Majid Memon, a lawyer involved in the public interest litigation
case, commented to Associated Press: Last weeks disaster
has exposed the citys inability to cope with such crisis.
It is a manifestation of a larger problemthe manner in which
we have ignored the basic interests of the people of Mumbai. If
we can develop the technology to make nuclear bombs and launch
satellites, why cant we build better drains, better roads,
give our citizens better amenities?
The obvious answer to the question lies in the operation of
the market. Successive municipal, state and national governments
have all been intent on opening up India to foreign investment
and transforming Mumbai in particular into a financial and economic
hub. As a result, city authorities have ignored planning principles
and bulldozed slums in order to provide land for high-rise development.
As in Shanghai, the divide between rich and poor has deepened
and infrastructure has been stretched to the limit. The consequence
has been a disaster that has claimed more than a thousand lives
and brought terrible suffering to many more.
One can predict in advance that Deshmukhs statement about
learning lessons will be forgotten as soon as the
flooding fades from the media. The year began with the tsunami
catastrophe that claimed more than 15,000 lives in southern India.
In June, heat waves with temperatures reaching 47°C caused
the death of more than 370, mostly poor people, throughout India.
That was followed by heavy rains and flooding in the state of
Gujurat which killed 142 people. In each of these cases, little
or nothing has been done to prepare for or prevent future tragedies.
See Also:
Tsunami survivors in southern
India speak to the WSWS
[21 January 2005]
South Asian floods
kill hundreds and leave millions homeless
[24 July 2003]
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