Facebook Pixel Cities Drowning in Greed's Flood | The New Indian Express Tadepalligudem - newspaper - Read this story on Magzter.com
Go Unlimited with Magzter GOLD

Go Unlimited with Magzter GOLD

Get unlimited access to 10,000+ magazines, newspapers and Premium stories for just

$149.99
 
$74.99/Year

Try GOLD - Free

Cities Drowning in Greed's Flood

The New Indian Express Tadepalligudem

|

June 01, 2025

The rains of May 2025 unleashed a merciless reckoning on India's urban giants—Delhi, Mumbai, Bengaluru—turning their streets into raging rivers, their homes into swamps, and their dreams into tragedies.

- PRABHU CHAWLA

Homes were swept away. Uprooted by rain rage, venerable trees collapsed on cars, killing people. In Bengaluru, a young boy stepped out of a bus and was sucked into a manhole by swirling waters. In Delhi, a wall collapsed and killed laborers.

On May 2, the capital was battered by over 80 mm of rain in mere hours, marking the city's wettest May since 1901. Minto Bridge, Azadpur, and areas near Delhi Airport's Terminal 1 submerged, stranding commuters and damaging vehicles; a car was seen swallowed by water at Minto Road.

Mumbai, hit with 104 mm of rain in a single hour at Nariman Point on May 26, saw the Mithi River—choked by encroachments—spill over, flooding Kurla and suspending Metro Line 3 services.

Flooding claimed eight lives in Kurla, including 15-year-old Ayesha, whose family shop was destroyed, their livelihood washed away. Bengaluru, grappling with incessant downpours, watched its IT corridors like Whitefield drown, with an X post decrying a "tech city sinking in filth."

Ironically, Mumbai can move billions of dollars across continents in seconds. But its billionaire residents living in multimillion-dollar condos can't move from one street to another during the monsoons. Delhi can host the G20 Summit over 3 sq km, but its residents must wade through foul water spewed from decrepit sewage systems.

Bengaluru's Vrishabhawathi river is a black, toxic stream—80 percent of the city's 1,800 million liters of sewage per day is untreated. It can connect the world, but not disconnect from despair. An X post lamented, "IT parks gleam, but floods expose our shame."

Even after 75 years, over 70 percent of Indian cities don't have a proper sewage and garbage disposal system. The infamous public works departments, which look after roads and civil works, are now the public's worst demon.

MORE STORIES FROM The New Indian Express Tadepalligudem

The New Indian Express Tadepalligudem

Fake currency racket kingpin with Bangladesh, Nepal links held in Bihar

THE Bihar police, in collaboration with the army intelligence, arrested the alleged kingpin of the Indian fake currency racket linked to Nepal and Bangladesh on Sunday.

time to read

1 min

May 25, 2026

The New Indian Express Tadepalligudem

Turning a new page on reading

CULTURAL commentary in recent months has lamented how short-form content has pushed books out of culture.

time to read

1 mins

May 25, 2026

The New Indian Express Tadepalligudem

STRAY CRISIS: STATES NEED TO FIX A BROKEN SYSTEM

HE Supreme Court’s recent order on stray dogs and cattle has rightly drawn attention—and the court's ire—to the lethargy of states, Union territories and local bodies in implementing Centre's animal birth control (ABC) policy, more than 20 years after its adoption.

time to read

1 mins

May 25, 2026

The New Indian Express Tadepalligudem

Why Haaland invested in Total Chess World C’ship

ON the streets of Oslo on Saturday, there were Barcelona jerseys wherever you looked. Not without reason.

time to read

2 mins

May 25, 2026

The New Indian Express Tadepalligudem

PEARLS AND PRAYER

ITH West Asia in the news every day, though for sad reasons, a related reverie comes to mind, one that engaged my thoughts, with one association leading to another.

time to read

3 mins

May 25, 2026

The New Indian Express Tadepalligudem

Centre’s steps on Ladakh positive but more needs to be done, says Wangchuk

ACTIVIST and innovator Sonam Wangchuk on Saturday described recent talks between Ladakh representatives and the Centre as a “positive step”, while cautioning that genuine trust in the Union Territory would depend on concrete action on unresolved issues linked to last year’s protests and institutional disputes.

time to read

1 min

May 25, 2026

The New Indian Express Tadepalligudem

Off the books: Literature degrees & the modern workplace

Literature graduates find work across publishing, branding, media, policy, editing, and digital communication, though educators say employability still depends heavily on self-built experience

time to read

1 mins

May 25, 2026

The New Indian Express Tadepalligudem

The New Indian Express Tadepalligudem

Wrestler Deepak’s name in Asian Games long list

DEEPAK Punia was the only Indian wrestler to reach the final and finish with a silver medal in the 2022 Asian Games held in 2023.

time to read

2 mins

May 25, 2026

The New Indian Express Tadepalligudem

‘Staying outside RCEP failed to curb China reliance’

INDIA’S decision to stay out of the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) may have cost it access to the world’s most critical supply chains without reducing dependence on Chinese imports, according to Taimur Baig, Chief Economist and managing director at DBS Bank.

time to read

2 mins

May 25, 2026

The New Indian Express Tadepalligudem

Pole vaulter Dev puts up a record show

“I TEXTED Dev Meena on WhatsApp that he would cross the 5.45m mark,” says pole vault coach Ghanshyam even as he was trying to soak in what he just witnessed.

time to read

2 mins

May 25, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size