Updated On: 29 July, 2024 05:04 AM IST | Mumbai | Dharmendra Jore
Planning, if it exists at all, goes haywire as rules are bent, abused, and violations go unpunished. Enlightenment happens when disaster strikes

A car moves through a flooded area during heavy rain, in Pune, on July 25. Pic/PTI
Urban jungles are being flooded like never before. Delhi, Mumbai, Pune, Nagpur, Kolhapur, Sangli, Mumbai. The list could be endless. Blame it on uncontrolled development. Some cities and towns may be affected for purely natural reasons, but most, as the findings go, fall to man-made problems that encourage and compound flooding situations. The genesis of such problems lies in an ecosystem of individuals, who are influencers by way of their positions in politics, policy-making and administration. Add to it the greed of the real estate business class that exploits the needs of consumers. Planning (if it exists at all) goes haywire as rules are bent and abused and violations turned a blind eye to. Enlightenment happens when a disaster strikes. All of a sudden, factors like excessive rains, dereliction of duty, misleading weather reports etc are blamed. Real reasons are debated only as an academic interest. Temporary measures are put in place. The permanent ones aren’t necessarily nature-friendly.
In Pune, the Mula-Mutha rivers became what Mithi river had turned out to be for Mumbai in the first decade of the 21st century. Uncontrolled constructions on the banks of these rivers led to the disasters. Pune was hit badly last week, because like Mumbai, the Pune rivers’ abuse was ignored by the blindfolded. The discharge from the dam swelled water levels. It is still not clear whether people living on the banks were alerted on time by the local authorities. Similarly, in Nagpur, haphazard development by an amusement park had led to the flooding of localities along the Nag river. In the recent Union Budget, the river projects in Pune and Nagpur have been allotted good funds. It is to be seen whether the hazards—the structures are purely illegal and those granted legality by the planners—are razed. Mumbai’s Mithi still continues to be a threat, many years after the governments started working on making it less dangerous.