Once again it's July, and once again Mumbai is under water.
But this was the monsoon havoc that was not meant to be -- not after last year's 26/7, when Mumbai's suburbs received a staggering 944 mm of rain. Hundreds of lives were lost, property worth several thousand crores of rupees destroyed.
Stung by the experience and its adverse impact on Mumbai's efforts to project itself as an international city, the city and state administrations went into overdrive, promised an infrastructure overhaul that saw hundreds of crores of rupees being pumped into revamping the city's roads, drains, link roads and traffic systems.
This year, the administration assured one and all, the experience would not be repeated.
Three days of rains are all it has taken to give this claim the lie.
Once again there are countless accounts of paralysed traffic, highways pockmarked with potholes, and water-logging from all over.
Commuters, Mumbai's unique sign of normalcy, are stranded, most are returning home after trying to get to work, and schools and colleges are shut. Roads are flooded, vehicles marooned, and it is got an eerie ring of flashback about it.
Is this what Mumbai's monsoon preparedness is all about?
What has been your experience as Mumbai is lashed once again by nature's fury?
Are you fed up of the claims -- that now ring hollow -- rolled out by Mumbai's makeover men constantly?
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