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Years of river mismanagement behind massive Pak flooding | Years of river mismanagement have made the massive floods
in Pakistan, which have inundated a fifth of the country and rendered millions of people homeless, worse, experts have said. The Indus River is considered as
Pakistan's lifeline, and since the partition in 1947 people have expanded the
canal system to cater to the needs of the ever increasing population by diverting
the river flow wherever it is needed to support agriculture. "The major river
engineering is basically a Faustian bargain," said Daanish Mustafa of King's College,
London. "Because humans have sculpted the river and the surrounding natural floodplain
and wetlands for farming and other needs, there are fewer floods, but when they
hit, they are far worse," Mustafa added. Asad Sarwar Qureshi, a water resources
expert at the International Water Management Institute (IWMI) branch in Lahore
cited that due to consistent exploitation river channels have been left with much
smaller area to absorb the rainfall. "There's not very much space in the river
channel to absorb all the rainfall. We need to get it back into shape, so that
it can carry its original capacity," Qureshi said. He pointed out that wetlands
along the river's course were used to take up some floodwaters, but because of
increasing needs those areas have been converted to farmland. The National Geographic
Channel news said that experts are of the view that allowing the river to flood
more regularly, and naturally, could help temper the floods and make them more
tolerable, "They need to give the rivers room to expand. Not along the whole way,
but they should restore some of the wetlands along the way," said Mustafa. Managing
Pakistan's floods is a delicate balance between giving the river more room, and
building barriers to protect people and their land, said Qureshi. |
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