Delhi waterlogging 2025: BJP chief Harsh Malhotra credits CM Rekha Gupta's desilting drive
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Delhi Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) President Harsh Malhotra on Thursday, 9 July credited Chief Minister Rekha Gupta and civic agencies for keeping waterlogging to a minimum during the capital's first major monsoon spell, calling it a decisive break from a decade of monsoon mismanagement. Despite more than 100 mm of rain falling on Thursday morning alone — part of a three-day rainfall streak — arterial roads and flyovers across New Delhi remained largely passable, according to Malhotra.
Scale of Pre-Monsoon Preparation
Malhotra said that under the leadership of Chief Minister Rekha Gupta, the Delhi Jal Board, the Public Works Department (PWD), and the Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD) jointly executed an extensive desilting drive over the preceding one-and-a-half months. Drains and sewer lines across the city were cleaned as part of the coordinated effort.
Authorities identified 169 waterlogging-prone points and 445 vulnerable locations citywide. Before 28 June, 167 pump houses and 754 mobile pumps were installed to ensure the drainage network could absorb heavy downpours from the season's onset.
How the City Fared During the Rains
Malhotra said that despite continuous rainfall over three days, there were no widespread reports of normal life or routine work being disrupted due to waterlogging. Ring Road, arterial roads, and flyover loops — historically among the worst-hit stretches — recorded minimal inundation, allowing commuters to move largely unhindered.
'As a result, Delhi's drainage system was well-prepared to withstand heavy rainfall, enabling residents to enjoy the first monsoon showers after many years,' Malhotra said. He described the outcome as the Delhi government's 'first major success' of the monsoon season.
Blame Directed at AAP Representatives
Malhotra acknowledged that some waterlogging was reported in parts of Old Delhi and East Delhi, but attributed those incidents to what he called the negligence of local Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) MLAs and councillors. He said the Delhi government would pay special attention to those areas going forward.
The remarks carry a pointed political edge: AAP governed Delhi for a decade before the BJP's return to power, and Malhotra framed the contrast explicitly, saying Delhiites had endured monsoon hardship every year under successive previous administrations that dismissed early flooding as a seasonal inevitability.
The Broader Context
Waterlogging has been a perennial flashpoint in Delhi's politics, with each monsoon season triggering blame between the state government, the MCD, and the Centre over jurisdictional responsibility for drainage. The BJP's structured pre-monsoon audit — identifying specific vulnerable points and deploying pumps ahead of the rains — represents a more granular approach than the reactive measures that typically followed past flooding episodes.
Whether the city sustains this performance through heavier mid-monsoon spells in July and August will be the real test of the desilting drive's durability.