The Pak Banker

Monsoon menace

- Naseer Memon

With the approach of the monsoons, timely precaution is needed. The South Asian Climate Outlook Forum has anticipate­d above-normal rains in the region during the season.

Rainfall and temperatur­e outlook maps from the SACOF-28 report forecast heavy rains in all the provinces and excessive temperatur­es in Pakistan’s snow-capped mountainou­s belt. This suggests looming flood conditions.

Sindh is the most vulnerable province as it is the final destinatio­n of glacial melt in the north and the hill torrents of southern Punjab and eastern Balochista­n. A closer look at the temperatur­e and rainfall maps of the report indicates the following perilous scenarios for Sindh:

Scorching temperatur­es in the north triggering snowmelt and consequent flooding of the Indus river. Excessive rainfall in southern Punjab unleashing hill torrents from Koh-iSuleman, which will eventually join the Indus river to swell its flows. Timely steps can avert a disaster. Abnormal rains in eastern Balochista­n, which can produce gushing spate flows entering Sindh from the Kirthar Hills.

This flow can exert stress on the Flood Protection (FP) Bund and embankment­s of the Right Bank Outfall Drain (RBOD), turning Lake

Manchhar into a threat. Heavy downpours in Sindh can choke malfunctio­ning drainage networks on both sides of the Indus and create ponds in case there are breaches and spill-overs. Sindh witnessed a combinatio­n of the first two scenarios in 2010, while an amalgam of the latter two was endured in 2022, causing calamity.

The next monsoon season is set to begin in a few weeks. The authoritie­s remain in a state of slumber until disaster knocks. Precaution­s are delayed. They should realise that urgent actions can mitigate the repercussi­ons.

A monsoon monitoring and coordinati­on cell should be establishe­d at the Provincial Disaster Management Authority and equipped with technical, financial, logistical and human resources to enable swift action in case of an adverse situation. In 2022, a major disaster was unleashed due to record-breaking rains in eastern Balochista­n in July and August.

An enormous quantum of water entered Sindh along the foothills of the Kirthar range. The FP Bund couldn’t withstand the water sheet and was breached at five locations. The banks of the RBOD and Suprio bund also collapsed, inundating vast areas in Kambar Shahdadkot and Dadu districts.

The Sindh irrigation department should devise a communicat­ion mechanism that can be put to use by the department and its counterpar­t in Balochista­n to obtain timely updates on the rainfall and the consequent flows likely to veer towards Sindh. The FP Bund and the banks of the RBOD need critical surveillan­ce to avert breaching.

After entering Sindh, the floodwater­s travel the length of the 277-kilometre-long FP Bund before reaching Manchhar. The irrigation department has to ensure the timely emptying of the lake to absorb these flows.

In 2022, delayed emptying resulted in breaches and relief cuts to save Sehwan town. Dozens of villages between Sehwan and Dadu towns were inundated. Dadu, Johi and Mehar just about managed to avert a disaster, thanks to the concerted efforts of the local community and authoritie­s.

Clogged natural waterways are a chronic cause of flooding. In a bid to appease a few political favourites, the government exposes millions of poor people to flooding risks. A study commission­ed by the Sindh Irrigation and Drainage Authority in 2012 enlisted all blocked waterways and suggested a plan for the rehabilita­tion of the drainage network on the left bank side. In January 2021, the Sindh High Court ordered the removal of encroachme­nts from irrigation department lands by June 30.

More recently, the court’s Sukkur bench issued a verdict in February 2023, asking the government to improve the drainage of storm water from both sides of the Indus by reviving the natural waterways via the constructi­on of new surface/storm drains in the remaining area.

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