Labels- Uttarakhand and Other Tragedies

Is it a man-made disaster, or a Natural one? Was it the Congress or the BJP that was responsible for letting construction happen? Did we ignore heavy rain warnings and delay the evacuation of people?

The act of trying to label things and pin the blame quickly on anyone or anything is not an adequately thought-out response, in my own view. And I could be in a minority. There are several things that contribute to a tragedy of this proportion. Primary among them are a sudden natural occurrence (such as a tornado, a tsunami fuelled by an earthquake) or an industrial accident (Bhopal, Chernobyl and so on). Other reasons are the population there, including the transient variety (floating population). Blind belief in worshipping specific idols rather than praying anywhere is another major cause, in this case. Building broader highways in hilly regions is not going to keep the fragile hills made of soft rock stable for too long.

Prevention is not easy, but sensibly thinking about it can help. Singapore manages to restrict the number of cars in the country. If we also tried to do so, some of these (and many others) disasters could be minimised. But two things are needed. Public transport-reliable, efficient and affordable, to replace private transport -not just in the Himalayas, but to commute to work or elsewhere, everyday. The car lobby and the oil lobby will not be happy, but we might just lower our oil import bill by a few thousand crores in the bargain.

Second, limits on development of every kind in any region, based on what it can sensibly take. Beyond a point, any piece of earth will give way, and lead to some disaster. Buildings crashing in many cities, not due to floods, but disregard for simple norms, are an example.

Development is necessary, but there are so many underdeveloped regions that we could develop, for industry, tourism and for living. Can we have a sensible action plan, rather than empty noises blaming someone or something? We are all in it together. At least, until we destroy it all.


4 comments:

Harimohan said...

I agree Raja. I think the sooner we move into a space where we can be happy with what we need, and not accumulate a huge amount of wants, the sooner we'll get to a space where we'd respect things around us. Right now all we want is more and more and more - without realising that we're blowing ourselves up. Time to consume less, and sensibly.

Diamond Head said...

'Baccha bhagvan ki den hai' will be the deathknell/ that will take it all

Rajendra said...

I wouldn't blame Bhagvan (God) if he went on a long vacation after watching his bachchon ki kartoot (deeds of HIS kids).

Beyond said...

What I concluded from the news and the articles was that though a part of tragedy could be due to government's negligence but let's forget that for a moment. All I wanted to see was how the government plans to tackle the situation at the moment when thousands are dead and stranded in the catastrophe, and as expected the attitude of the government was shallow. Callous remarks, obstruction of relief work by aerial surveys by ministers, ah there is no sane leader in the government today.

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