Denemek ALTIN - Özgür
Cities Drowning in Greed's Flood
The New Indian Express Chennai
|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.
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.
Bu hikaye The New Indian Express Chennai dergisinin June 01, 2025 baskısından alınmıştır.
Binlerce özenle seçilmiş premium hikayeye ve 9.000'den fazla dergi ve gazeteye erişmek için Magzter GOLD'a abone olun.
Zaten abone misiniz? Oturum aç
The New Indian Express Chennai'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE
The New Indian Express
10 yrs on, HC says Appavu Radhapuram victor in 2016
SETTING aside the victory of AIADMK’s IS Inbadurai in the 2016 Assembly election from the Radhapuram constituency, the Madras High Court has declared DMK leader and former Assembly speaker M Appavu as the elected candidate.
3 mins
June 04, 2026
The New Indian Express
70% of non-priority card holders in state complete e-KYC verification
FOLLOWING e-KYC (know your customer) verification of Priority Household (PHH) ration cards — under which rice, wheat and ragi entitlements are fully funded by the union government — the state government is undertaking the drive among Non-Priority Household (NPHH) cardholders, around 70% of whom have been covered so far, official sources said.
1 mins
June 04, 2026
The New Indian Express
Forced to work sans safety gear: TCMC sanitation staff
A section of conservancy workers employed through a private agency (Our Land) in Tambaram corporation (TCMC) has alleged they are being forced to handle garbage without basic safety gear such as gloves, boots and helmets.
1 mins
June 04, 2026
The New Indian Express
FOR A NIMBLE WELFARE FRAMEWORK
AS the West-Asia crisis persists, countries are hard-pressed to respond. Over half the global responses have been concentrated in the form of subsidies, as per the World Bank.
3 mins
June 04, 2026
The New Indian Express
US proposes 12.5% more tariff on India over forced labour concerns
THE US Trade Representative (USTR) on Wednesday proposed an additional 12.5% tariff on 54 countries, including India, for failing to enforce a forced labour import prohibition under Section 301.
1 min
June 04, 2026
The New Indian Express
City corpn approves SOP for homeless shelters in Chennai
THE Greater Chennai Corporation (GCC) on Tuesday approved the Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) to institutionalise the operation and management of corporation-run shelters for homeless persons across the city.
2 mins
June 04, 2026
The New Indian Express Chennai
US PROPOSES 12.5% DUTY ON INDIAN GOODS
India has failed to impose, enforce ban on imports linked to forced labour, says USTR
1 mins
June 04, 2026
The New Indian Express Chennai
PACKED IN A
The bindi has outlasted empires, survived colonial erasure, been weaponised as a caste marker, mocked in school corridors, and is now back on foreheads across the world. This is its story.
6 mins
June 04, 2026
The New Indian Express Chennai
The real side of Challenger Sindarov
WITHIN a few minutes of sitting next to Javokhir Sindarov, it’s evidently clear that this year’s World Championship is going to be out of the ordinary.
3 mins
June 04, 2026
The New Indian Express Chennai
‘THE CHOLA PLATES HAD BECOME PART OF A FAMILY HEIRLOOM’
Aparna Nair catches up with researcher Dr Achuthan Govindankutty Menon, who played a vital role in the recent restitution of the Anaimangalam copper plates from the Netherlands to India
4 mins
June 04, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
