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Flood havoc- a wake up call
By Islamuddin
Chitral is facing the worst floods in recent memory. Mercifully the
loss of human lives has been minimal but the loss of property will
take years to recoup. The magnitude of the tragedy may have been
reduced, had the people and the Government applied their minds in
carrying out development works along the river beds. In those areas
where river beds have been encroached upon the losses are
significantly high. Under the laws of the land river beds are state
property and their uses are to be regulated by the Government.
Unfortunately state has abdicated its responsibility to the land
grabbers. I myself did a lot of advocacy with the District
Government to legislate on this subject and determine width of the
river beds in peak flood season and not allow any structure beyond
a certain point.
The current flood is a curtain raiser.. Environmentalists have been
warning us that global warming would cause flash floods in upland
areas which would result in the rise of water table and submerge
low laying areas and even countries. The current floods should
therefore be taken as a wake up call. Steps should be taken on war
footing for land utilization and management. Without land
management in upland areas, Pakistan runs the risk of silting of
its dams, river courses and water channels. There are laws on the
subject but these are not being enforced and development projects
are carried out without natural compliance
During the current floods, I have come across two development
projects, which not only got destroyed but also aggravated losses
in their catchments area. The protection works along river in Izh
village had been constructed by encroaching on the river bed
leaving no space even for moderate flood water to pass. As a result
a dozen shops were washed away when the river overflowed its banks.
Five years ago in 2005 when the then DCO had come here to assess
flood losses he had strictly warned the people not to encroach upon
the river beds which were state property. This warning has gone
unheeded and the Government has also failed to establish its writ.
A bridge, constructed at this venue is so narrow and prone to
silting that it is likely to divert the river course towards the
main market and Pamir Degree College, a valuable public property
worth Rs.60 million. One may well wonder how the projects were
cleared by engineers and funded. Another protection work
constructed last year at huge cost has guided the river towards the
very village it was supposed to save. No engineer or supervisor has
lost his job for inefficiency or corrupt motives in carrying out
substandard work.
Downstream on river Lotkoh newly constructed heavy traffic bridge
got submerged in mud because its width was not enough to allow
flood water pass under it .The throwback of the flood water from
the bridge nearly washed away a dozen households settled on a
borrowed land. Eight of the households lost their cattle shelter to
the flood diversion caused by the bridge. The losses caused by
flooding in Booni gol and other places can also be attributed to
these factors. No protective wall can work to divert the course of
flood water in uplands where flow of water is sharply downwards.
Here only the width of river bed and straight position of flow will
work, However in plain areas downstream where water flow is smooth,
protective walls will and have worked. The Government is well
advised to follow this age old wisdom instead of relying on the
reports of its engineers for whom contracting is a gold mine.
From the above it appears that the recent flash floods in Chitral
are as much the handiwork of people and the government as of Mother
Nature. Mothers punish their wrong doing children and so does
Mother Nature. Is the Government also under punishment for failing
to discharge its responsibility? The question now is that what we
should do now? The simple answer would be enforcement of laws to
regulate land use. If the Government can not manage them, these may
be leased out to civic spirited citizens for management and
environment compliant use. I know of a case involving land dispute
which has been decreed in favor of the state but the state has not
taken it over and the land grabber still occupies it saying that he
has filed a writ petition in the High Court but there is no stay
order. Meanwhile hostile occupation of the river bed poses serious
threat of flood diversion to adjoining village of 65 households.
The state must wake up to its responsibility. Apart from enforcing
laws it should carry out massive forestation in uplands, impose
complete ban on cutting of trees, attend to pasture ( ban keeping
of goats for 10 years and instead focus on poultry, fisheries and
dairy farming for protein needs)and glacier management, bring
barren lands under cultivation and reduce carbon emission We owe it
to our future generation to bequeath to them a better Chitral than
the one we inherited.
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