LAHORE: As Lahore residents brace themselves for more rain, a Water and Sanitation Agency (WASA) spokesperson told Arab News on Thursday that his department was capable of dealing with the heavy downpour in the city and clearing its waterlogged roads.
According to Imtiaz Mujtaba, WASA can handle 100-millimeters of rain on any given day.
“We faced a technical problem on Tuesday,” he said. “However, we had to deal with 287 millimeters of rain that broke the 30-year-old record. Still, we were able to clear the roads in six hours, which is a big achievement.”
Life in the historic city of Lahore came to halt on Tuesday when it was hit by torrential rain that lasted for several hours. The situation not only made it extremely difficult for people to move around the city but also flooded people’s houses, markets, metro stations and underpasses.
The main roads of Lahore were submerged as rainwater destroyed thoroughfares and left huge potholes in its wake. Lahore’s most popular duel carriageway, The Mall, caved in, opening up a crater in front of the high court building. This forced the authorities to shut it down to all traffic, though it also made people criticize the quality of the work done by the Orange Line contractors who have been working on a train project in the city.
A total of 13 people died in road accidents and there were incidents of roof collapse and electrocution.
“Throughout the province of Punjab, 29 people died in rain-related incidents. Thirteen of them belonged to Lahore. Meanwhile, rescue workers saved the lives of another 138 people by transporting them in boats or shifting them to hospitals after road accidents and electrocution,” Jam Sajjad Hussain, Rescue 1122 spokesperson, told Arab News.
Many people criticized the government, saying that some politicians had promised to turn their city into Paris, but “they have now left us to drown in water.”
“These people are thieves. They have plundered the money in the name of development. What happened on Tuesday was eye-opening. Where did all the money spent on development works go?” Ali, a resident of the Shah Moaali area, told Arab News.
The business community was forced to suspend its activities as it was almost impossible to move around in the city.
“We were forced to shut down our business. We pay taxes to a government that cannot even clear rainwater. Thousands of daily wagers went out of pocket on Tuesday,” Hasan Butt, a trader at Regal Chowk, said.
The residents of Lahore also suffered power outages when more than 200 electricity feeders tripped due to the rain. As a result, some portions of the city remained without electricity for more than 18 hours.
The Met Office has predicted more rain in and around the city in the coming days.