Gulf Today

Rain cripples life in Mumbai for third time this monsoon

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For the third time this monsoon, pouring rains brought the country’s commercial capital to a standstill with total disruption in road and rail traffic and flights here on Wednesday.

Earlier, Mumbai had been brought to its knees on July 2-3 and Aug.3-4 when heavy rains clobbered the city, claiming nearly three dozen lives in varous rain-related incidents.

Though a renewed bout of rains had started lashing the Mumbai Metropolit­an Region since Monday, the city itself collapsed in the less than 18 hours of overnight rains since Tuesday evening.

In the past 36 hours, the India Meteorolog­ical Department said Mumbai, Thane, Palghar and Raigad districts averaged a whopping 25-30 cms rains, while Vasai-virar belt in Palghar got a staggering 50 cms rains.

The IMD has issued a ‘Red Alert’ for Mumbai and surroundin­g districts which could be lashed by very heavy rains over the next two-three days.

As a precaution­ary measure on Wednesday, the government declared a holiday for all public and private schools in these districts, advised people to venture outdoors only if necessary and exercise other safety measures.

This aternoon, the National Disaster Response Force, the Indian Navy and the Mumbai Police came to the rescue of around 1,500 people stranded in the flood waters of Mumbai’s sole flowing fresh-water body, the Mithi River which overflowed and entered their homes in Krantinaga­r area of Kurla.

According to sources, around 20 flights were cancelled and 280 affected by delays, go-arounds etc, due to heavy rains and fluctuatin­g visibility conditions. However, Mumbai Internatio­nal Airport Ltd officials said the operations were “near-normal”.

Though the city’s lifelines - Western Railway (WR) and Central Railway (CR) continued to function with hiccups, by noon, the local and long-distance services had to be suspended due to heavy waterloggi­ng on railway tracks at different locations.

WR was suspended for several hours between Churchgate-andheri and Vasai-virar due to waterloggi­ng near Mahim-matunga.

The WR cancelled two long-distance services, short-terminated two, diverted four and reschedule­d 18 trains on its network, throwing passengers’ plans haywire.

The CR was suspended between Chhatrapat­i Shivaji Maharaj Terminus-thane, but surprising­ly, the vulnerable Harbour Line operated with delays. The CR cancelled 24 long-distance trains, short-terminated four, short-originated 3 and reschedule­d seven trains.

Total chaos reigned on the Eastern Express Highway (EEH) and Western Express Highway (WEH), main roads and arterial roads with waterloggi­ng in many areas like Mulund, Bhandup, Vikhroli, Ghatkopar, Kurla, Sion, Kings Circle, Wadala, Chunabhati, and Bandra, Santacruz, Vile Parle, Andheri, Jogeshwari, Malad, Kandivali, Borivali and Dahisar.

Many low-lying areas in the city including Sion, Wadala, Dadar, Parel, Kings Circle, Matunga, Chunabhati and in suburbs Andheri, Jogeshwari, Santacruz, Malad, Borivali, Mulund, Bhandup, Kanjurmarg, Vikhroli, Kurla and surroundin­gs were flooded in one or three feet and more water, in many areas water entering people’s homes on the ground floor.

Roads on the exteriors like Mumbai-goa Highway, Mumbai-pune Expressway, Ghodbunder Road, Mumbai-ahmedabad Highway, Mumbainavi Mumbai Road, and others also experience­d huge traffic snarls as the snowballin­g effect of the conditions in Mumbai.

In several places, big and small vehicles were stranded in the flood waters forcing their occupants to abandon them, which added to the traffic jams.

Virtually caught unprepared by the overnight downpour, people had to wade in knee-deep to waist-deep waters for their normal chores, while in Ganesh Talao area of Kandivali, locals deployed a make-shit rat to ferry people in the flooded areas.

The BMC had made arrangemen­ts for stranded commuters at various locations near railway stations where they could spend the night with the railways and NGOS making arrangemen­ts for food and snacks.

Rains severely hit the ongoing Ganeshotsa­v festivitie­s in the four districts - Mumbai, Thane, Palghar and Raigad - and flood waters seeped inside the various marquees and pandals compelling the Brihanmumb­ai Sarvajanik Ganeshotsa­v Samanvay Samiti President Naresh Dahibavkar to issue a precaution­ary appeal.

City comes to a standstill with total chaos in road, rail and air traffic; ‘Red Alert’ issued for Mumbai and nearby districts; holiday declared for all public and private schools

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 ?? Associated Press ?? ↑ People navigate their way through a flooded street in Mumbai on Wednesday.
Associated Press ↑ People navigate their way through a flooded street in Mumbai on Wednesday.

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