Mumbai's Monsoon Streets Turn Treacherous with Hidden Potholes
Mumbai's vital suburban arteries are facing a familiar, yet dangerous, monsoon-season crisis. Recent heavy rains have severely degraded key roadways, particularly in the Kurla and Andheri corridors, transforming them into hazardous passages. The core issue is no longer just visible flooding but deep, water-filled potholes concealed beneath the rainwater, creating an unpredictable and treacherous driving surface for millions of daily commuters.
For the Desi diaspora, whose families and memories remain deeply connected to these neighborhoods, the annual deterioration of Mumbai's infrastructure is more than a distant headline. It is a direct concern for the safety of relatives navigating these roads on two-wheelers or in auto-rickshaws, and a point of frustration over persistent civic challenges in a city often viewed as India's financial capital. The state of these roads disrupts the rhythm of daily life, impacting everything from commute times to the delivery of essential goods and services.
This recurring problem underscores the ongoing struggle between intense seasonal weather and urban maintenance, a theme familiar to many from South Asian cities. It highlights a communal concern for safety and civic accountability, tying diaspora readers to the ground realities faced by their communities back home each monsoon.
