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CM Punjab posing for picture while supervising water drainage !

Well, public transport and food facilities are important too.

Well, these projects can be started together. No problem there.

we could be jumping to conclusions. Lahore is a city of 10 million. It could be that most of the city now does have proper drainage 6 years on, and this new pic could just be a single highlighted incident.

It isn't a single incident it's happening almost all over Lahore and Punjab even posh areas of Lahore. Samaa TV covered yesterday most of Lahore and it was full of knee deep water.
 
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ferozpur road, this was build 6 month ago,

also I saw a whole road collapsed near liberty.

This is a big pot-hole. Lahore's soil structure and Lahore's increasing traffic load could have led to this amid the down pouring of the monsoon.

But you are right. This is a matter of design by the civil engineers. Questions must be placed to the engineering contractor and consultancy companies to explain their apparent failure in designing for the conditions of Lahore's traffic. If laws were stringent, they can be taken to court.
 
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The problem is money, or more correctly, the lack thereof.

First people, then money why don't you say I can't accept the fact that the problem is government. Punjab government which has been here for 7 years have enough money to do all the projects if they wanted but they didn't, floods in 2010 wreaked so much damage and what did we got? Metro bus, army has been called in flood hit areas of Sialkot, Narowal, Azad Kashmir etc. All we can do now is pray.
 
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This is CCPO office in the first picture, its on Fatima Jinnah road, right opposite to Punjab Assembly, and 2 buildings away from CM House.. 1 day rain and the whole city turns into gutter !

Was this an exceptional single day rain? Because if it wasn't, it is a massive negative point for the civil administration in Lahore. This is a big flood seen in the pictures. Its waist deep and everyone known floods are very destructive and expensive.

The bus shouldn't be driving as its dangerous for the passengers.
 
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First people, then money why don't you say I can't accept the fact that the problem is government. Punjab government which has been here for 7 years have enough money to do all the projects if they wanted but they didn't, floods in 2010 wreaked so much damage and what did we got? Metro bus, army has been called in flood hit areas of Sialkot, Narowal, Azad Kashmir etc. All we can do now is pray.

Please look back at my posts. I have clearly identified the people (who litter and do not pay taxes) and the government (who plan and maintain poorly, and yes, are corrupt too) as contributing factors.
 
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OMG how the hell is metro gonna run there?!

Stupid assholes had they spend money on drainage instead of relying on British empire kay zamanay ki drainage system people would have trusted they want a better Pakistan!

We should ask questions. That way answers can be produced.

1) Why haven't there been contingency plans for heavily populated regions of Punjab to safe-guards against floods? Didn't Pakistan learn from the world's worst flood crisis that hit a couple of years ago? Because memories are fresh, Punjab, with its massive rivers and plains is basically a flood plain.

2) Why is the flooding so severe in Lahore?

3) What has the Punjab government done for the drainage of rain water in Lahore city? We need to look at the projects, feasibility reports, commissioning, spending, and operations and maintenance. There are a lot of bodies and people involved in making a single road.

4) Where is the civil administration in disaster relief?

5) Has a judicial enquiry been started?
 
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They dont have ability to play constructive role in politics. They are just good in this dharna, long mraches, iqalaab, Intashaar, big fake promises and just hollow hopes for future and bashing everyone except those who join hands with Pti or their messsiah Ik. Now because of this political instability and cahos in country sri lankan and Chinese president have cancelled their tour to Pakistan and we know how important it was for country and people of Pakistan but well let continue this garbarge show on steers of Islamabad .

I think these floods hitting Lahore and central Punjab are more important for Pakistan. Have some perspective please and don't play dirty politics.
 
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we could be jumping to conclusions. Lahore is a city of 10 million. It could be that most of the city now does have proper drainage 6 years on, and this new pic could just be a single highlighted incident.

Pakistan

Half of the annual rainfall occurs in July and August, averaging about 255 millimeters (8.8 inch) in each of those two months. The remainder of the year has significantly less rain, amounting to approximately fifty millimeters (1.1 inch) per month.

Weather and Climate: Pakistan, average monthly Rainfall, Sunshine, Temperature, Humidity, Wind Speed

Let us take Lahore for example:
6.5 million (2013)

Japan

There are earthquakes happening almost every week if not everyday + typhoons and tropical rains hitting Japan

Average rainfall from 1990 to 2009.

June 203.8 mm
July 228.2 mm
August 189.4 mm
September 206.5 mm

Tokyo population
13.35 million (May 1, 2014)

Climate Change Knowledge Portal 2.0

What did Japanese do in Tokyo?

The Metropolitan Area Outer Underground Discharge Channel, is an underground water infrastructure project in Kasukabe, Saitama, Japan. It is the world's largest underground flood water diversion facility, built for preventing overflow of the city's major waterways and rivers during rain and typhoon seasons.

Work on the project started in 1992 and was completed by early 2009; it consists of five concrete containment silos with heights of 65 m and diameters of 32 m, connected by 6.4 km of tunnels, 50 m beneath the surface, as well as a large water tank with a height of 25.4 m, with a length of 177 m, with a width of 78 m, and with 59 massive pillars connected to a number of 10 MW pumps that can pump up to 200 tons of water (the approximate equivalent of a standard 25 meter pool) into the Edo River per second.

"Ryukyukan" for Underground Exploration Museum of The Metropolitan Area Outer Underground Discharge Channel is also a tourist attraction and can be visited for free; however, as the tours are conducted in Japanese, a Japanese speaker must be present in the group to act as a translator for non-Japanese speakers.

Metropolitan Area Outer Underground Discharge Channel - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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November 1, 2012

How giant tunnels protect Tokyo from flood threat

On the outskirts of Tokyo, behind a small government building, underneath a soccer field and skateboard park, sits a remarkable feat of engineering.

It's an example of how Japan's capital, which lies in a region at high risk from flooding and tropical cyclones, is trying to figure out how to contain the elements to protect its 13 million inhabitants.

The entrance, which is locked at all times, is so nondescript a visitor may walk past dozens of times without ever noticing it.

But today, we are given a tour down below of the so-called "Water Discharge Tunnel."

Built between 1993 and 2006 at a cost of nearly $3 billion, the stunning complex is far more impressive than its name suggests.

Winding down a series of stairs, you soon come upon a massive hall, resembling an underground Parthenon, or a scene out of a science fiction film.

The initial water tank stretches more than 320 feet in length and towers higher than a five-story building.

When you add it all up, the complex features five massive shafts, or tanks, that are able to move water along a tunnel that stretches nearly four miles.

In this area of Saitama prefecture, heavy rains would often flood the Naka River Basin. But now, that valuable farmland has an incredible drain system sitting below.

When the tanks and tunnel fill, engineers are able to turn on the heart of the system, which is a series of four turbines powered by jet engines similar to those used in a Boeing 737 airplane. The turbines are then able to rapidly funnel floodwaters to the nearby Edo River.

It's worth noting that this part of suburban Tokyo can hardly be compared to the dense underground of New York City, which is a maze of subway tunnels, sewage systems and power lines.

The engineers here are the first to point out that their system, while remarkable, is meant to deal with heavy rains -- and that it would struggle to cope with a Sandy-type storm surge coming from the Atlantic Ocean into New York's Upper Bay.

Still, the underground marvel could inspire engineers to look for new ways to try to contain Mother Nature in the future.

How giant tunnels protect Tokyo from flood threat - CNN.com

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Looks like have achieved 'Venice' status.
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that was a funny comment, but I didn't feel like laughing as millions of people seem to be suffering, hence the army being called in for help as the civil administration seems to be in capable.
 
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