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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2009

New Delhi: Having just experienced a flooded Delhi, and having read about a similarly flooded Mumbai last week, Just to Clarify wanted to ask a very simple question: Why do Indian cities collapse when it rains heavily? Why, for example, should traffic lights fail? Why aren’t storm water drains large enough for such volumes of water, and why it so hard for these drains to be augmented? Why does the power go out? Why do roads crumble? And most importantly, why are these defects so difficult to correct, considering that we know the power of the monsoon, and have known it, in fact, for decades?

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To answer these questions, Just to Clarify welcomes two guests. Professor Usha Raghupathi, from the National Institute of Urban Affairs, has a domain of expertise that includes urban development management, infrastructure and services, and urban reforms. A Srivatsan is a Chennai-based urban planning expert.

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Bharat Said:


It's simple, the people incharge of this aren't under the local elected officials. Hence there is no pressure to maintain and improves system. Lack of political will or pressure

Posted On 7/28/2009 11:47:36 PM
krishna Said:


Actually, our cities are planned well, its not that planners did not put enough wide or deep drains. the reasons are 1. People encraoch the Drains 2. Clogging due to plastics and other things thrown in to drains 3. the drains are not dug up to the planned or required wide/deep, though there is a space.

Posted On 7/29/2009 9:50:29 AM