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Not providential

Not providential gujarat has faced damages worth Rs 8,000 crore in the recent flash floods, according to a preliminary assessment; the figure is expected to rise further as more reports come in. Continuous heavy rains lashed the state in the last week of June 2005. The state government conveniently blamed nature, getting Rs 500 crore and Rs 92 crore from the Union government and the National Calamity Relief Fund, respectively. “As against the average annual rainfall of 833 millimetre (mm), Gujarat had already received 745 mm (89 per cent) rainfall up to July 3, 2005. Strangely, the rainfall between June 26 and July 3, 2005, was as high as 609 mm (73 per cent of the average annual rainfall). Such phenomenon occurs once in a 100 years, and can only be god’s will,” said V Thiruppugazh, joint chief executive officer, Gujarat State Disaster Management Authority (gsdma), Gandhi Nagar (see table: When it rained…). But was it actually nature’s fury that stormed Gujarat?

Down To Earth visited Ahmedabad, Kheda and Vadodara districts. Village after village complained about how the state highways built at a height acted as walls and didn’t allow an outlet for the floodwater. With the waters rising fast, villagers at broke open the highways, bypasses and clogged culverts, but much damage had already been done.

Highways, nay death traps Gujarat boasts of the best road network in the country, with Ahmedabad-Vadodara national expressway as a jewel in its crown. The expressway, constructed for about Rs 600 crore, is built at a height that is over 18 metres above the ground level in some places. Its walls stopped the flow of floodwater from villages located on both its sides. Villagers were left with the only option of perching atop the expressway, the only high ground available to them. The entire villages of Dajipur, Jorapur, Chingodhar, Khatrapura, Hajarpura and others shifted over the expressway, which looked like a long flood relief camp. The expressway itself breached at three places and suffered huge damages.

Following massive protest by villagers and negative media reports, the state government had to finally blame the expressway for the flooding. Local media reports say the state government has sent a sharply worded letter to the National Highway Authority of India, seeking a solution to the problem.

The plight of villages situated along the Ahmedabad-Vadodara stretch of national highway 8 was similar. In one incident, officials at a toll bridge on Kheda l&t toll road were beaten up by villagers. The residents of some 15 villages on either side of the bridge blame the bridge for flooding their villages; they threaten to dig open the road and burn down the tollbooths. The bridge is elevated and blocked the flow of water from these villages, cutting them off from the rest of the world for days. Most villagers lost their houses, cattle and stored grains. For now, authorities have stopped collecting toll on either of the two highways between Ahmedabad and Vadodara, possibly to avoid further confrontation.

There was an added problem with the 28-kilometre (km) Dholka-Bagodara highway in Ahmedabad district, which is under construction. Several diversions were made along this road for traffic movement. But none of these had culverts to drain water. Where they existed, they were either too small or blocked. This led to the inundation of many villages. Villagers narrated harrowing experiences of how the floodwater kept rising and they were not able to cross over to the other side of the road. “The highway contractors had made two diversions on both sides of our village without providing any culverts… Our village was completely flooded for 10 days. We requested the authorities to break the diversions but they refused initially.

When it rained…
Unexpectedly heavy rainfall in Gujarat

District Average annual rainfall (1994-2003) Rainfall between June 26-July 3, 2005 Total rainfall up     to July 3, 2005 Total rainfall against annual average rainfall (per cent)
Valsad  2,201 1,250 1,715 77.92
Navsari 1,750 1,370 1,818 103.89
Bharush 658 421 535 81.31
Surat          1,290 1,057 1,263     97.91
Vadodara         917 631 715  77.97
Anand           634  728    793 125.08
Kheda             832 638 689 82.81
Ahmedabad 628 463  562   

89.49

Amreli       544 601  613 112.68
Surendranagar  499 357 443  88.78
Mehsana 620 355    384 61.94
Bhavnagar 517 382  491 94.97
Junagadh 743 229 476 64.06
Gandhinagar 664 649    684  103.01
Average 833 609 754
(73 per cent of total) (89 per cent of total)
Note: All figures in millimetres; *Per cent
Source: Gujarat State Disaster Management Authority 2005, Government of Gujarat, Gandhi Nagar, Gujarat, mimeo.
They heeded only after we threatened them,” says Bharat Kumar Jadav, resident of Valthera village on the highway. Sarandi, Jalalpur and Godneshwar villages also had to force the authorities to break the roads.



Narmada canals contributed
For Sarandi and Lilapur villages, on the other side of the Dholka-Bagodara highway, breaking of the diversion wasn’t enough. A Narmada canal passing through their village aggravated their problem. An angry Ghanshambhai of Sarandi is abusive: “The government has not used its brains in constructing the Narmada canal, as it cuts across the natural gradient of water. There was a major flood in 2004 and we broke the canal. It was rebuilt. We had to break it again this year. This is becoming an annual feature. We have demanded the construction of an underground passage for the rainwater, but no action has been taken.”

The fate of Lilapur is worse. It has an elevated railway line on one side and a Narmada canal on the other, virtually making it reservoir. This year, the canal was breached at two places for relief. Shiyawada, Ganol, Ganeshwar and several other villages also share the plight. But the state government hasn’t acknowledged the problem.

Acute crop loss
The flood-hit villages have suffered major crop loss. But villagers along the Dholka-Bagodara highway have only been given Rs 500 for the flooding of their houses. “Our whole paddy crop has been destroyed. We had planted paddy, locally known as dharu, which had to be replanted after a few days. But since our fields were flooded for 15 days, all of it was spoilt. Now we will have to replant dharu, which costs Rs 13 per kilogramme (kg)...Many farmers have lost their Bt cotton crop too,” rues Valthera’s Snehalbhai. Some places in Kheda got a meagre Rs 15 per person per day for food.

Urban floods, a ritual
Floods in Ahmedabad, Vadodara and other cities of Gujarat are an annual ritual. Municipal corporations make empty promises every year about solving the problem. “This year, Ahmedabad municipal commissioner promised that a pre-monsoon plan had been formulated and no flooding will take place. But the first monsoon shower blew apart the plan. The Usmanpura underpass failed its first ever monsoon,” points out Rajesh Bhat of Ahmedabad Study Action Group, a non-governmental organisation.

“It is ironic that most cities of Gujarat, the first Indian state to enact the Development Plan Act, remain unplanned. Ahmedabad’s statutory development plan was revised recently but without inputs from citizens and experts. It has no detailing of sewerage, water supply, transportation and other important factors. All it shows is arbitrary land use pattern. And then, various consultant-based projects are added to it as and when they are cleared,” laments Prasanta De, professor at Ahmedabad-based Centre for Environmental Planning and Technology.

De claims no municipality undertakes the extremely crucial job of contour mapping of the city to avoid flooding. The present day floods are basically a drainage problem, he adds.

The back alleys of Vadodara main city corroborate the view. “Vadodara had a traditional drainage system of kaans

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