Mumbai and Karachi: Why They Drown Every Monsoon

 



Each year the story is the same. The skies open, the streets vanish under water, and officials act as if it were a surprise. Mumbai and Karachi, two vast cities facing the Arabian Sea, flood almost in unison. The similarity is not coincidence. It is history, geography, and governance repeating itself.

The Geography of Risk

Both cities rest on low coastal land. When heavy rain meets a high tide, drains fail to release the water. The sea blocks the flow, and entire neighbourhoods turn into shallow lakes. What should have drained naturally is pushed back into the streets.

Old Bones Beneath New Cities

Mumbai still runs on drains laid out by the British in the nineteenth century. They were built for a town, not a metropolis. Karachi’s nullahs were carved to carry seasonal streams, not the torrents of a city of twenty million. Populations grew, concrete spread, but the drainage did not keep pace.

Encroachment and Neglect

Wetlands and mangroves once soaked up the rain. They are now built over. The Mithi River in Mumbai has narrowed into a foul canal pressed between slums and flyovers. In Karachi, Gujjar Nullah and Orangi Nullah are clogged by settlements and choked with waste. Authorities promise pre-monsoon cleaning every year, yet when the first storm arrives, manholes are blocked and water rises within minutes.

Climate Turns Fierce

Rainfall has grown more intense. What once fell gently over weeks now crashes down in hours. Neither city can withstand such pressure. Rains that were once welcomed for relief now bring fear of another deluge.

Inefficiency and Corruption

Here the resemblance deepens. In Mumbai, the municipal corporation, the state, and national agencies all hold pieces of the puzzle. In Karachi, Sindh government, city authorities, cantonment boards, and the federal administration share power. The result is paralysis.

Funds are announced, projects are awarded, but much of the money vanishes before it reaches the drains. Contracts go to friends and allies. Housing schemes rise on floodplains because they are profitable. The water then comes and proves the betrayal.

Who Suffers

The poor bear the cost. In both cities, the rich withdraw into high-rises or gated colonies. It is the bus commuter, the motorcyclist, the street vendor who wades waist-deep. Until leaders themselves face the water, change will remain a promise.

The Cycle

Floods are not acts of God alone. They are failures of government. Yet each year the cycle continues: the rain, the outrage, the excuses, and the silence. Then the next monsoon arrives, and the story begins again.


Closing thought: Mumbai and Karachi show the same hard truth. Floods are not only about the skies. They are about what governments refuse to fix.

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