Editorial:-
Evening drizzles [okay, they are more intense than just
drizzles] have become a regular occurrence now. And for those live along the
highway, as well as those who need to travel by road to anywhere, which would
be just about everyone now, will have noticed that the storm-water drains are
still not performing any better. Along with the surface runoff, the highway in
Gangtok is also inundated at several places after a heavy shower by effluents
which smell offensively dangerous and move like sludge no one should be wading
through. Occasionally, some efforts are made to unclog the drains, but the
experience ever since they were commissioned bears out that they will block
immediately with the next rain. The point being made here is that even as all
conversations and obsessions continue to remain centered around the election
results and the latest conspiracy theories and projections, life is still going
on in Sikkim and the monsoons are building up. The calling cards have been
served with the evening showers and how they have unraveled civic
infrastructure, so it is important that the concerned officials and agencies
make time from their political gossip to address the reality of approaching
monsoons.
It is only a matter of time before the national highway,
which has remained an expansion work in progress for far too long, collapses
under the weight of pre-monsoon inundation. Higher up along the same axis, the
pipelines carrying water to the Selep reservoir will also eventually snap, as
will the road to Tsomgo and Nathula. The weather pattern suggests that 2014
will record a normal, if not heavier, monsoon and the crumbling tendency of
civic infrastructure should have everyone worried. Both, the highway expansion
and the Ratey Chu supply line repairs are projects which make headlines every
monsoon. Shouldn’t these have stabilized by now, and if not, isn’t it now that
preventive measures need to be undertaken. Granted, the rains can be very
devastating, but surely, a State that has lived with rains and slides since
forever should have learned to prepare better by now. But maybe we are
over-speculating. Maybe the concerned departments and offices are on the job
already firming Sikkim up better for the monsoons. Do you think that is the
case?
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