New Straits Times

Devastatin­g South Asia floods expose lack of monsoon planning

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NEW DELHI: The most devastatin­g floods to hit South Asia in a decade have killed more than 1,400 people and focused attention on the poor planning and lack of preparedne­ss for annual monsoon rains, as authoritie­s struggle to get aid to millions of destitute.

Floods in Texas have dominated world media coverage in recent days, but India, Nepal and Bangladesh have suffered flooding for two months, with hundreds of villages submerged and tens of thousands of people in relief camps short of food and vulnerable to disease.

Districts will take months to limp back to life, with schools destroyed, roads washed away and crops ruined in some of the region’s poorest areas, officials said.

As the extent of damage became clearer, experts highlighte­d how poorly prepared government­s were to deal with an annual problem.

Most government action in India, where the flooding has hit hardest, focused on relief, with weak early warning systems and too little focus on prevention.

The head of a South Asian body launched this year to boost disaster coordinati­on said the flooding underlined poor planning.

“The floods this year have exposed the urgency for (South Asian) nations to work together to deal with natural disasters,” said P.K. Taneja, of the Indiabased SAARC Disaster Management Centre.

Flooding upstream in Nepal, for example, was followed by flooding in India this year and then downstream in Bangladesh, he said, but there was little coordinati­on.

“We cannot work in silos to deal with floods... It is the worst of floods in decades.”

India’s federal auditor, in a damning report released in July, said most states had no identifica­tion and no assessment of flood-prone areas.

Tens of millions of dollars earmarked for flood management remained unspent. And of the 4,862 large dams, only 349 were functionin­g, it said.

Flooding happens annually across South Asia, as rivers burst their banks during the JuneSeptem­ber season of heavy monsoon rains.

In India’s Bihar state, where 514 people died and 850,000 were displaced, campaigner­s said the government had built too many embankment­s, roads and highways that trapped excess water and given little thought to drainage.

But disaster management officials said it was unfair to criticise, given the scale of this year’s deluge.

“If you get a whole year’s rain in one to two days, how will you handle it? No preparatio­n and planning will work,” Anirudh Kumar, of Bihar’s disaster management department, said. Reuters

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