By Sardar Khan Niazi
Each year, as monsoon clouds gather over Pakistan, they bring with them a collective sense of hope. For a largely agrarian economy, the rains promise replenishment of reservoirs, rejuvenation of crops, and a break from the suffocating summer heat. However, this hope is increasingly giving way to despair. In our cities and villages alike, the monsoon season has become less about relief and more about ruin. From Karachi’s inundated roads to the swelling rivers in Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, the country is grappling with a failure far more persistent than the rains themselves: chronic mismanagement, poor urban planning, and criminal negligence. The scenes are painfully familiar — waist-deep water in residential neighborhoods, overflowing drains, broken infrastructure, and tragically, rising death tolls. It is not the rain that kills, but it is the state’s failure to prepare. Let us take Karachi, the country’s economic engine, as a case study. Despite repeated promises by local and provincial authorities, each monsoon lays bare the incompetence and indifference of those responsible. Storm water drains, or what little remains of them, are choked with plastic waste and construction debris. Encroachments on nullahs are well documented but remain largely untouched. What is billed as a natural disaster is often anything but. It is man-made, predictable, and therefore preventable. In Lahore and Rawalpindi, the story is not much different. The aging sewage systems buckle under the pressure of heavy rainfall. Roads become rivers within hours, leading to property damage, traffic chaos, and, in some heartbreaking instances, loss of life by electrocution or drowning. In rural areas, poor housing collapses under rain-soaked pressure, displacing families who have no safety net to rely on. For these communities, monsoon season is a fight for survival. The climate crisis is intensifying this already dire situation. Pakistan, among the countries most vulnerable to climate change, is witnessing more erratic and extreme weather patterns. Rainfall is becoming heavier, less predictable, and more destructive. On the other hand, instead of investing in climate resilience, we remain trapped in a cycle of reaction rather than prevention. Year after year, the response is the same: emergency declarations, appeals for aid, and then a swift return to business as usual once the skies clear. This short-sightedness must end. If anything, the 2022 floods — which displaced over 33 million people — should have served as a wake-up call. Nevertheless, the lessons remain unlearned. Billions were pledged in climate aid, yet much of that funding is tied up in bureaucratic limbo or diverted elsewhere. Meanwhile, the ground reality remains bleak. What is needed is not just more funding, but a complete overhaul of our urban and rural planning priorities. Storm water infrastructure needs to be modernized and maintained, not just patched up during crises. Early warning systems, already underfunded, must be expanded and integrated into local governance. Local governments, often the first responders in such disasters, must be empowered — financially and administratively — to act swiftly and independently. At the citizen level, awareness must be raised about waste disposal and the importance of keeping drains clear. However, responsibility cannot be shifted to the public alone. Accountability must start at the top. Those who fail to deliver basic services year after year must not be allowed to hide behind statements about unprecedented rainfall and natural calamities. The monsoon is not an enemy. It is a vital part of our ecosystem. Nevertheless, without vision, planning, and willpower, it will continue to be a season of suffering for millions. Although India’s release of water is to blame this year, the question we must all ask is this: will we wait yet again for the next tragedy to act?
