The Free Press Journal

2019: Rains caused mayhem in western Maharashtr­a

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While the monsoon season is always welcomed for bringing respite from the summer heat and replenishi­ng parched reservoirs, this year it wrecked havoc in parts of western Maharashtr­a where over 80 people lost their lives and lakhs got displaced after unpreceden­ted rains.

Heavy showers pounded several districts in western Maharashtr­a, including Sangli, Kolhapur, Pune and Satara, causing flooding and damaging crops in August and September.

Over 55 tehsils were badly hit in Kolhapur and Sangli.

As several villages got marooned, the National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) and Army had to be pressed into action to rescue people stranded there.

Nearly 62 people were killed in floods and rain- related incidents in Pune division, which comprises Pune, Solapur, Satara, Sangli and Kolhapur districts, according to official figures.

Of these, 17 people lost their lives after a boat capsized near Brahmnal village in Sangli on August 8.

“Seven to eight lakh people were shifted to safer places in Sangli and Kolhapur in August for which 105 rescue teams, 200 boats and two helicopter­s were used,” an official at the Pune divisional commission­er’s office said.

The then chief minister Devendra Fadnavis had to halt his pre-election tour of the state and visit the flood- affected districts to take stock of the situation.

The floods damaged crops on over 4.89 lakh hectare agricultur­al land in the division and affected 8.73 lakh farmers, the official said.

The state government had to ask Karnataka to discharge water from the Almatti dam built on the Krishna

river for the flood situation to ease in Maharashtr­a.

Pune, the state’s second largest city and an educationa­l hub, also witnessed mayhem in August and September as heavy rains lashed the district.

Flash floods claimed over 20 lives in various parts of

Pune in September.

According to an official, illegal constructi­ons on water streams were the main cause of deluge in the city.

Pune-based environmen­talist Sarang Yadwadkar in August pinned the blame for rain fury on the state government, alleging that floodline of the Panchganga river in Kolhapur was “redefined” to provide benefits to the constructi­on sector.

Maharashtr­a BJP chief Chandrakan­t Patil, however, later denied that the floodline of Kolhapur was altered by the then party-led state government due to pressure from the builders’ lobby.

The floodline defines the area which is no-go for developmen­t.

Talking on Thursday, Yadwadkar said, “There is a need to go into the root cause of all such incidents.

Flooding, fire incidents, traffic jams, pollution are all symptoms. If we continue to treat the symptoms, we will never go to the root cause. The need is to tackle the root cause of all these problems.”

He also said that urban planners need to identify the population-carrying capacity of cities and learn to differenti­ate between growth and “malignant growth”.

“Developmen­t of cities is unplanned because of uncontroll­ed migration. Migration takes place for job opportunit­ies because people do not have infrastruc­ture back in their villages. There is need for the migration to slow down,” the activist opined.

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