It is clear from the devastating scale of this year's flooding in Bangladesh that Dhaka cannot cope with the natural disaster on its own. Government sources put the number of people affected at nearly 30 million, fearing that the post-flood recovery will be slow and problem-ridden.
This is because the time to replant the destroyed rice crop is fast running out while floodwaters have continued to rise - even 40 per cent of the capital has been underwater for several days.
If waters don't recede anytime soon, it is feared that a severe food shortage will cause a famine-like situation, lasting months and affecting some 20 million poor people who have already lost their homes and hearths.
Widespread health crisis cannot be ruled out either, with water-borne diseases like diarrhoea and cholera breaking out and taking their toll. Snakebites are another problem to worry about.
Getting food, clothes and medicines out to the stranded flood victims requires massive funds, well-coordinated relief efforts and a huge number of qualified personnel and volunteers. Bangladesh's own resources simply do not match the scale of the disaster.
Home to some of South Asia's giant rivers such as Ganges, Padma, Jamuna, Brahmaputra and Meghna, Bangladesh mostly comprises low-lying plains where flooding is a perennial seasonal problem. But this year's floods are the worst in about six years.
Environmentalists attribute the ferocity of the current disaster to growing deforestation and increasing and ill-planned irrigation activity. The two have resulted in soil erosion in the highlands and in the silting up of the riverbeds in the plains.
These environmental damages can only be undone by proper long-term planning and implementation, especially with regard to the number and siting of the irrigation projects.
Meanwhile, the appeal by Dhaka to the international community for emergency supplies and for funds to meet the flood victims' immediate relief and rehabilitation needs is urgent. It must be responded to at once to avert an impending humanitarian crisis.
Pollution in the NWFP
One reason why we never seem to be able to implement the law, and thus effect an improvement in the lives of the people, is attributable to the constant bureaucratic delay in setting up the legal apparatus required for enforcing rules.
An example of this can be seen in the NWFP, where the relevant authorities are showing scant interest in establishing environmental tribunals charged with the task of taking legal action against those found guilty of violating the Pakistan Environmental Protection Act, 1997.
The result is that more than 30 cases of environmental offences are pending, leaving those exposed to the risks of industrial and other types of pollution with no choice but to put up with the hazards of ill-health.
Like the other provinces, the NWFP faces an environmental crisis with air, noise and ground pollution exceeding all permissible limits, including those prescribed by the National Environmental Quality Standards.
With no corrective action being taken, this scourge is sure to take on distressing proportions as more and more people are suffering from respiratory and other diseases, with industrial effluents and other toxic substances affecting their systems.
Already thousands of people are feeling the impact of the uncontrolled emissions of lethal carbon dioxide from vehicles and brick kilns and of untreated industrial effluents making their way into the sources of drinking water.
If this situation is allowed to continue, the resultant drain on health resources is likely to far exceed the costs involved in instituting a system of prevention and control aimed at curbing pollution.
This is something that the provincial authorities and the public - that has so far done little to register its protest against the large-scale pollution in the province - must take note of, so that they can jointly take legal action against those who continue to pollute the environment.