In Gurugram, 8 lives lost in just 2 hours of rainfall
Gurugram, July 11 -- It was chaos that is all too familiar for people living in the so-called Millennium City. On Wednesday night, a two-hour downpour triggered a cascade of tragedies across Gurugram, leaving at least eight people dead-electrocuted, drowned, swept into manholes or killed in road accidents.
By morning, roads remained submerged, drains were choked with sludge, and anger among residents had risen almost as fast as the floodwaters. Once again, the promise of a world-class urban centre lay shattered in the deluge, exposing the threadbare fabric of civic planning, even as officials and politicians continue to point fingers and deflect blame.
However, the chaos did not end there. Taking note of the severe disruption, the Deputy Commissioner issued an advisory to all corporate offices and private institutions, urging them to allow employees to work from home on Thursday. "This measure is intended to mitigate traffic congestion, as the India Meteorological Department (IMD) has issued an Orange Alert for the city," the order stated.
The first death was reported around 9.30pm, barely half an hour after the rain started. Akshat Kumar Jain, a 30-year-old software engineer, was riding home from the gym on Ghasola Road when his motorcycle slipped on waterlogged tarmac. He skidded into a pole with exposed live wires submerged in calf-deep water. Eyewitnesses tried to rescue him using bamboo poles but could not save him. Jain, a resident of Delhi's Vishwas Nagar, was declared dead at a private hospital. Police later booked officials of the private power distribution company for negligence under IPC Section 304-A.
The second tragedy struck three-and-a-half hours later in nearly identical circumstances. Pawan Kumar, 26, a food delivery executive, stopped near Plot 22 in Sector 18 to buy a snack. Minutes later, he was heard whispering "Bachao, bachao" (Save me, save me) on the phone before the line went dead. His body was found next to an electric pole submerged in water. A nearby shopkeeper who tried to pull him free suffered burns. An FIR has been registered.
At 10pm, 22-year-old Prashant Mishra was electrocuted while climbing rain-slicked stairs in Arjun Nagar's Sector 8. He had touched a railing charged by a frayed wire running through ankle-deep water. He was dead before help arrived.
Then, at 10.30pm, 28-year-old auto-rickshaw driver Shailender Kumar parked near Sispal Vihar in Sector 49. Police believe he stepped off the road to relieve himself and was "sucked" head-first into an uncovered roadside manhole by the current in the knee-deep water. Locals spotted his body minutes later.
At 3.30am, a taxi carrying a contractual employee of an airline operator and two security guards from Delhi airport slammed into uprooted concrete median blocks on Khandsa Road. The driver, blinded by rain and glare from headlights on the water's surface, never saw the obstacle submerged below. Vanshika (24) died on the spot.
By morning, news arrived of another tragedy from Bhondsi's Aravalli hills: 11 teenagers had visited a disused mining pit that had overnight turned into a rain-filled pool. Three-Ashish Kumar, Surjeet, and Devender, all 16 or 17-slipped under. Villagers retrieved their bodies. "We've asked for these pits to be fenced, but no one listens," said village sarpanch Shyam Lal.
The slip-road of the Southern Peripheral Road (SPR) near Sectors 75-75A caved in-again-for the third time in just over a year. This time, a truck carrying beer crates was half-swallowed by the crater. Engineers blamed water infiltration near an under-construction drain for the collapse, which barricaded one carriageway and choked traffic on the stretch from Vatika Chowk to NH-48.
In households across the city, people experienced the usual monsoon woe. In neighbourhoods like Palam Vihar, Sushant Lok, Heera Nagar, and Sectors 5, 6, 10A and 15, residents woke up to find their living rooms flooded, basements submerged and sewage flowing uphill. In Palam Vihar's C-Block, drains stood taller than the lanes they were supposed to empty, pushing effluents into homes.
"We had to move our kids and grandparents to a neighbour's first floor," said Sameer Khurana. With most autos refusing trips and cabs quoting five times the fare, many were stranded for hours. Sector 56 RWA president Harish Yadav pointed out five open manholes in just one block. "One misstep and you're gone," he said.
One of the most striking images of Gurugram's civic collapse on Wednesday night emerged from the Rajiv Chowk underpass, which was transformed into a deep, debris-laden pool after hours of torrential rain. Water levels rose above car windshields, completely submerging vehicles and leaving several commuters stranded. Visuals of people wading through waist-deep water as emergency responders struggled to reach them went viral on social media, highlighting the sheer scale of the chaos. The flooding at this key junction caused massive traffic jams on Sohna Road....
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