The Chennai warning is a wake-up call to industrial India

Bad planning has exacerbated a flooding disaster in southern India but global warming is the real culprit, writes Shashi Tharoor
The Chennai warning is a wake-up call to industrial India

Even as world leaders were meeting in Paris to address climate change, the city of Chennai (formerly Madras), the capital of the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu, reeled under the onslaught of the heaviest rainfall in 104 years.

The city, home to 5m people, has virtually shut down, with roads flooded and nearly 5,000 homes under water. More than 450 people have died. Air and rail services have been suspended, power and phonelines have been disrupted, and hospital patients are succumbing as life-support equipment fails. Victims had to be rescued in boats by India’s army and air force.

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