Why India's Silicon Valley Is Sinking

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Read Time: 6 mins
Aerial view of waterlogging in Bengaluru. (Photo: BQ Prime)

“Slept in Bangalore, woke up in Venice.” This post by a Twitter user exemplifies the disaster that stuck east Bengaluru by way of record rains over the last three days starting Sept. 4.

Knee to waist-deep water on main roads, bikers and car drivers struggling to negotiate surging water, vehicles and owners stuck in the middle of the road being shifted on JCBs, boats instead of vehicles on the roads, families rescued from luxury villas or slums and transported in tractors, swanky cars like Bentleys nearly fully downed on apartment basements—all became everyday scene over these three days in these eastern parts of what many call Silicon City. These pictures have sadly come to represent Bengaluru not just in India but in many parts of the world. There was more disaster waiting—a 23-year-old woman died of electrocution as she slipped and fell on a live electric wire. According to IMD, the rains may continue over the next few days.

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It is not just these three days that the drowning city was hit by endless rains—it witnessed massive showers last week too. And Monday's rain was the third highest rainfall that the city received in a single day in the last 38 years in the month of September. Check these figures: the city was pounded on Sept. 12, 1988 and it resulted in a massive 188 mm rainfall; on Sept. 26, 2014, it received 132.44 mm and on Sunday-Monday night, it got 131.1 mm in a matter of 10 hours.

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