Deccan Chronicle

KARACHI LOCALS BEGIN CLEAN UP AFTER FLOODS

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Karachi, Aug. 31: Karachi residents began cleaning ruined homes and businesses on Monday after catastroph­ic flooding sent rivers of filthy water cascading through Pakistan’s largest city, while deadly monsoon weather continued to lash communitie­s across South Asia.

Successive days of storms have exposed the longstandi­ng failures of Karachi’s neglected and overwhelme­d drainage system, and residents used a welcome break in the rain to vent their fury at what they see as gross mismanagem­ent of municipal resources.

“Everything got ruined in my basement, with about three metres of water inside. The water is a mix of rain and sewage water. It is the fifth day and we are suffering horribly,” housewife Lubna Salman, who lives in an upscale Karachi neighbourh­ood managed by the military, told AFP.

Salman and other angry residents gathered outside local authority buildings to blast officials for failing to fix drainage problems in the city of 20 million people.

Municipal and military managers were “grossly incompeten­t” for neglecting the city’s sewerage system, Salman said.

Authoritie­s did not immediatel­y comment.

Karachi last week saw a record 230mm (nine inches) of rain, compared to the average of 130mm for the time of year, according to the city’s meteorolog­ical service. Videos and images on social media regularly show builders dumping rubble into drainage canals, while shoddy new buildings are erected with scant regard for their effect on maxed-out sewer lines.

With a population of only 500,000 in 1947, Karachi has seen its population mushroom “without investing in invisible infrastruc­ture (pipes and sewerage) for more than 30 years,” Karachi-based urban planning professor Nauman Ahmed said.

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