Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Rain wreaks havoc in NCR, more predicted

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In Delhi, water-logging was reported from Jagatpuri, Sarita Vihar, Dwarka Link Road, Mayapuri Chowk, Dwarka More, Minto Road, Geeta Colony and stretches between Sarai Kale Khan and Nizamuddin, Badarpur and Ashram.

Till 5:30 pm on Thursday, Safdarjung, which is considered representa­tive of city’s weather, received around 19 mm of rainfall. The heaviest rain was recorded in the Ridge area -around 30 mm.

The Delhi government on Thursday afternoon issued the first flood warning list after Haryana released around 1.36 lakh cusecs of water from the Hathni Kund barrage in Haryana, about 200km from Delhi, that could affect low-lying areas on the Yamuna floodplain. The water will take 48 hours to reach Delhi, a senior official of the Delhi Irrigation and Flood Control Department. The Delhi government issues three stages of warnings -at 1 lakh cusecs, 3 lakh cusecs and 5+ lakh cusecs -- over release of water from Haryana, the official said.

The Delhi high court on Thursday slammed the Delhi administra­tion’s inability to curtail recurring water-logging across the city and ordered a mapping of all drains and the areas they service. A bench of acting chief justice Gita Mittal and justice C Hari Shankar said there should be a consolidat­ed colour-coded mapping of storm water drains.

The bench pointed out that photos in newspapers showing a bus submerged under Shivaji Bridge (Minto Road) showed how the administra­tion was not doing enough. “It doesn’t seem like it is Delhi. It looks like some tribal area,” the bench said, asking for a “composite plan” to fix the problem rather than piecemeal plans from different agencies.

In Ghaziabad, police had to close one side of the newly inaugurate­d 10.3km-long Hindon elevated road for nearly four hours on Thursday morning after heavy rain caused water-logging near UP Gate. The district magistrate in Ghaziabad has declared that all schools will remain shut on Saturday, in Noida the decision has been left to the discretion of schools.

Residents of Vasundhara blamed the road cave-in on digging activity undertaken by a developer on a plot across the road from Vartalok housing society. “The constructi­on activity is on for past 4-5 years and a huge pit has been in place for past several years,” said Rajiv Kumar, president of the Vartalok society Residents’ Welfare Associatio­n (RWA).

“It happened a few minutes after the school bus crossed the road at around 7.30am. I was walking back home and heard a thud. I rushed to the spot and saw that a major portion of the road had collapsed. The entire water from the road was flowing into the crater,” said Rajesh Kumar, who was among the first people to see the cave-in.

While KA Singhal, the superinten­ding engineer of UP Avas Vikas, the agency that developed Vasundhara, said the roads were constructe­d nearly 20 years ago and handed over to the municipal corporatio­n in 2002 for maintenanc­e, municipal commission­er CP Singh blamed the agency for not informing them about the digging activity on the plot across the road.in Greater Noida, a three-storey house collapsed in Mubarakpur village, but the family that lived in it had vacated the building before it collapsed, and an under-constructi­on hospital wall collapsed in Noida’s Sector 71.

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