Editorial:-
The weather forecasts are predictable – showers and
thunderstorms in some areas, every evening. Sikkim’s response to the weather
patterns is also predictably routine – slips, slides and slush. What is
surprising though, is the fact that the inept drainage system remains
consistently failed despite the hordes of engineers that the capital is home
to. How is it that roadside drains refuse to, well, drain? Gangtokians might
think that this is a condition unique to them, but as today’s edition bears
out, the problem plagues the rural roads of Dikchu as much, as it does the
recently urbanized spread of Namchi. The price that poorly engineered storm
water drains can exact was deeply felt by Gangtok in 1997 when several lives
were lost and building toppled when the rain water ran on the road and then
into buildings instead of getting carried away by the drains. Sixteen years
since, and the situation has only worsened. New trouble-spots have cropped up
and it is not just the drains to blame; also contributing to this madness every
time it rains is the insensitivity with which people construct [buildings],
store their building material and how Gangtok disposes it garbage. It’s the
still abject lack of civic responsibility in the Gangtok way of life that is
causing as much harm as the corruption and ineptness which delivered drainage
systems too ineffectual for its topography, road alignments and settlements.
There is as much household [and hotel] waste flowing down the highway during
the squalls as there are mud and rocks that the rain carved out of the hill.
These are not unrelated constituents of a ‘landslide’. A pile of garbage in an
out-of-sight spot in a too cramped for a garbage truck to reach spot is as
effective in triggering a slide as recklessly disposed building excavation mud
in an out-of-sight spot. Both are imposed on the slopes and both slip with a
heavy shower and scratch out a larger landslip as they roll down and gather
strength. The drains, already dodgy in their effectiveness, are denied even a
face-saving carriage capacity due to the quickness with which carelessly
left-behind garbage of construction leftover drains into drains and clogs them.
While this is reasonably harmless in the drier winter months, it adds to
everyone’s woes when the nights receive rainfall. The downpour washes these
piles of garbage off their heaps and spreads them across the road, pours them
into nearby homes and squeezes them into drains and blocks them.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Readers are invited to comment on, criticise, run down, even appreciate if they like something in this blog. Comments carrying abusive/ indecorous language and personal attacks, except when against the people working on this blog, will be deleted. It will be exciting for all to enjoy some earnest debates on this blog...