179 © Springer Japan 2017
M. Banba, R. Shaw (eds.), Land Use Management in Disaster Risk Reduction,
Disaster Risk Reduction, DOI 10.1007/978-4-431-56442-3_10
Chapter 10
Flood Disasters and Land Use Planning
in Swat Valley, Eastern Hindu Kush
Atta-ur-Rahman, Farzana, Ghani Rahman, and Rajib Shaw
Abstract This chapter analyzes the flood disasters and effectiveness of land use
planning and enforcement in Swat Valley, eastern Hindu Kush, north Pakistan. In
Swat Valley, flooding is a recurrently occurring phenomenon. In upper reaches flash
flood characteristics dominate, while downstream Madyan river flooding dominates
the scene. Downstream Madyan, Swat River enters into a wide basin and braided
into numerous channels. The meandering river is frequently changing its course. In
Swat Valley, almost every year in summer, the peak discharge overflows the natural
levees and in effect causes damages to scarce agricultural land, housing, and other
sectors. While in certain areas, deep riverbank erosion is very active and engulfing
the farmland and built-up areas. Primarily, the active floodplain of Swat River was
a vast grazing land, but with passage of time, the increasing population has used it
for cultivation and other developments without taking into consideration risk of
floods. This in turn has enhanced the flood vulnerability to various developments.
For centuries people lived within the valley of Swat River with the reality of flood-
ing as a natural hazard and with the fact that it has a potential to cause damages to
people and their belongings, but so for no attention has been given to land use regu-
lation and zoning. Land use regulations have been widely used as a non-structural
flood mitigation strategy in reducing exposure of people and their property. It was
found from the analysis that frequent human encroachments onto the flood channel
and absence of land use regulations have been identified as the major factors respon-
sible for heavy flood losses. Looking into potential and challenges in land use plan-
ning, this is high time to undertake fluvial morphology and rainfall-runoff model for
flood risk assessment and spatial land use planning.
Keywords Swat Valley • Land use • Flood • Damages • Regulation and enforcement
Atta-ur-Rahman (*) • G. Rahman
Department of Geography, University of Peshawar, Peshawar, Pakistan
e-mail: atta_urp@yahoo.com
Farzana
Government Post-Graduate Girls College, Swat, Pakistan
R. Shaw
Integrated Research on Disaster Risk (IRDR), Beijing, China