Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Floods: Blacked out but real

This is a thought triggering editorial of the current issue of Down To Earth, Science and Environmental online...
read on...

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Editorial: Floods: blacked out but real
By Sunita Narain

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I read newspapers and I watch the news unfold on scores of television channels. But in spite of these sources that keep me informed about current affairs, I would not know that floods are still ravaging vast parts of India. I would not know that over 2,800 people have died in these disasters, which have been termed as the worst ever in living memory. I would not know what is happening in the villages that drowned under the fury of nature or how millions are coping with the water that has swept away crops, livestock, worldly belongings, homes, roads, schools and what not. I would not even know how life continues after the fury, when deadly diseases come in the wake
of the flooding.

In retrospect, I would think that I have seen in the Indian media more images of the recent floods in the UK than in Jammu and Kashmir, in Uttar Pradesh, in Bihar, in Assam, in Orissa, in Andhra Pradesh, in Karnataka and in Gujarat. There are two responses to this observation.

One (cynical) answer is that middle-class India, for whom the media now delivers news (or infotainment), is simply not interested in events that affect poor India. In addition, the advertising revenue of the competitive and consolidated business of the media kicks in when it caters to the purchasing segments of society, not its market-unconnected parts. Floods in non-metropolitan cities don't make the grade, as far as news is concerned.

The other, equally plausible reason could be that floods in India are after all not news. While floods in the UK are unusual; they are increasingly understood to be part of the changing climate system and so they make it to the headlines. But floods in India are annual events. The cycle of devastation is not worth reporting-droughts followed by floods in one region or another, and then water-related diseases, from malaria to cholera. There is no news to tell.

But whatever explanation you choose to believe, we cannot switch off reality. The story of floods is partly usual but also mainly unusual. There is much we know but still do not heed so that devastation is less painful. But equally, there is much that we do
not know because of which the pain is much more frightful.

We know that the areas classified as flood-prone-defined as area affected by overflowing rivers (not areas submerged because of heavy rains)-has progressively increased over the past decades. It was 25 million hectares (mha) in 1960, which went up to 40 mha in 1978 and by the mid-1980s an estimated 58 mha was flood affected. But importantly, over these years the area under floods increased each year even though average rainfall levels did not increase. In other words, we were doing something wrong in the way we manage the spate of water so that rivers would overflow each season.

The answer is not difficult to find. In flood-prone areas-from the flood plains of the mighty Himalayan rivers to many other smaller watersheds-the overflow of the river brought fertile silt and recharged groundwater so the next crop was bountiful.

But over the years, we learnt not to live with floods. We built over the wetlands, we filled up the streams that dispersed and then carried the water of the rivers and we built habitations in lowlands which were bound to be inundated. We cut down our forests, which would to some extent have mitigated the intensity of the flood by impeding the flow of water. All in all, we have become more vulnerable to annual floods.

The current floods are all that, and much more. In recent years, the flood fury has intensified because of the changing intensity of rainfall. The deluge comes more frequently because of the sheer fury of incessant rain, which has nowhere to go. Just last week torrential rain in villages of Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka killed over 60 people. We know that climate change models had predicted extreme rain events. Is there a connection here?

Then there is the issue of the release of water from reservoirs into lands, which are already deluged by rain. It is this combo effect that seems to be playing a big role in the floods we see today. There is some evidence that reservoirs-dams upstream of drowned lands-were already full of water at the beginning of the monsoon period. There is no hard evidence, as yet, to link this high reservoir level with increased flow from melting glaciers. But there is a possibility.

We know that dam authorities maintain high reservoir levels because of the uncertainty of rains. We also know that when there are intense bursts of rain and levels of water rise to an extent that could endanger the dam, the gates are opened and the water rushes out. If this flow of water is combined with even more rain in the region, then a deluge becomes inevitable. We know that variability in our rainfall is increasing at the sub-regional level. What then will this mean for the management of our reservoirs in the future? The question is do we understand the phenomenon of floods?

We don't. We have no mechanism to be informed of the changing intensity of rainfall; of the increased inflow into our reservoirs and of the water released by dam authorities. The fact is that today's floods are a double tragedy: of mismanagement of our land and water combined with mismanagement of science and data.

This mismanagement is criminal. Let's at least know that.

Tuesday, October 09, 2007

Too Possessed......


Feeling the numbness reaching the third eye,
feeling the touch of the next level of the high,
HIGHER i go with every word read,
but the mortal cast i bear bending its head,
i strive to go far ahead,
Alas!!! I have to carry the physique too dead...
Feeling no fear of the task ahead,
i try to derive the power from the dead.
They say he reminds of the christ on the cross,
Only man who was ready to bear every material loss...
They say, he was a Utopian dreamer,
Do dreams still fly from the land of those deceased???
Do the many coloured crow still flies low???
CHE, they call him, as we know...
Yes, dreams still flow when the soul calls Soul...
they make us ready and again i boil,
feeling possessed by the soul of the Star,
Still feeling if he was ever really dead...
the third eye opens and now i can see,
the path so clear to push the mortal ahead...
Is it we who make him live
or he who gives us life???
I don't have the time to answer,
the possession to strong...
Feeling no danger i move ahead,
with my head too high...
And now i get to know why he is always looking towards the skies...
Here i come to embrace the next stage,
Here i am to lead the war i wage...

THE MOMENT REMAINS


The skull begins to shiver
and through the dendrons flows the pain
The pain filling the brain
Every cell burning
Shreiking for survivalS
hreiks louder than a human body to hear
Above the level of any pain it beared
Thou Soul, above the bodily limitations, quivers
the soul ready to bear it once again
Ready to test its limitations to take away the pain
Pushing itself out of the mortal it bears
still trapped n binded by his tears
With no pity but all love for the mortal
it hugs the pain, Stillness remains
Pain becomes the Soul
and Soul becomes the Pain
The mortal left to witness the remains
Wanting to know if its Soul or the Pain
Tormented for rhe first time feeling himself
He feels the Soul, he drinks the Pain
the process of digestion, powered by the soul
Drains the pain but the MOMENT REMAINS...

Monday, October 08, 2007


Having not slept for last complete night, it was tough for me to go to the Lead India contest’s debate phase where I was invited as a jury member. But having taken the responsibility, I carried my mortal self through the power of my soul that was feeling that I m going to find lots n lots of good things there than I can ever find in a movie show or something where we never miss going if we have bought tickets to.
Quite a good number of people had turned up there and many have made a good research on the candidates(or were doing so right then) as it seemed from the TOI copies in there hands.
I got seated in the hall at around 3:40 PM as they had asked us to do so before 3:45 PM. I was almost sleeping when the debate started and to make it worse, the candidates who were the first to speak were singing good night songs in the hall. The topic of the debate was carefully chosen- Which form of democracy you find is more appropriate in a country like India- The Presidential or The Parliamentary?
The first 3 candidates had their view but were almost reading it mechanically from a paper making me feel sleepier. But from the fourth candidate, the momentum got picked up n that woke me up. Most of them were in the favor of Parliamentary system while one candidate said that the debate is irrelevant as both have there pros n cons and cannot be compared. The last candidate upped the ante by saying that as for so long we have had no success with the Parliamentary one, it becomes somewhat necessary to try the Presidential one.
The candidates who I enjoyed were-
Aseem Puri- He seemed clear about his view and had statistics to back his view. He spoke in the favor of the Parliamentary system.
Sanjiv Kaura- Only candidate to have spoken in the favor of the Presidential one was very good with experience, qualifications, knowledge and confidence to back him. He based his thoughts mostly on what he had himself witnessed n not just theory.

My View-
Both Presidential and Parliamentary forms are equally good as what remains to be seen as who is the leader who’ll get the power in the end. It all depends on the Political will of our Leaders.n the people, i.e. you guys. Its not the system that is at fault here, its us.
If a wood is eaten by termites, whose fault is it??? The wood’s or the Termite’s???
Its we who converted the system to what it is now n now we want a change. If after the change too we keep working like this then we’ll make the other system too the same.
Countries of both types have faced both good n bad situations so citing examples will be faulty but what more can we demand than a mixed one that we already have. We have almost all the good features of both and I say as that everything has changed since we first coined these terms, we should first try to find that are these the only two ways???? Why not try to find even a better one if possible.
Hey thinkers, have u stopped writing or is our technology too loud for any of us to hear you??