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Crisis deepens as India blocks Chenab flow

Pakistan to go to WB for water compensation from India


ISLAMABAD: Pakistan will go to the World Bank (WB) to seek compensation from India for reduced water flow in the Chenab River and design defects in Baglihar Dam, Indus Water Commissioner Jamaat Ali Shah said on Wednesday.

Shah reiterated that Pakistan had demanded water, not monetary compensation, from India for the losses incurred due to decreased water flow in the Chenab.

He said both countries had exchanged data about the water flow in the Chenab River during his recent visit to India, but India had objected to the data compiled by Pakistan and asked for a visit to Marala Headworks for inspecting the water flow.

The commissioner said Pakistan has authorised India to visit Marala, adding that a demand for compensation for the water losses and an assurance of honouring the Indus Water Treaty in the future has also been put up.

He reiterated that India had violated the treaty while filling Baglihar Dam, adding that it filled the dam in 10 days instead of completing the process in a period of 60 to 70 days.

Shah said water shortage due to the initial filling of the dam has badly affected the agriculture sector in Pakistan, as farmers could not receive the water to irrigate their fields in time.

He said Pakistan has also asked India to install a telemetric mechanism at the Chenab River and provide data about filling and release from the dam on a daily basis.

The Chenab water row has adversely affected the peace process between the two neighbours that was initiated in 2004. app
 
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ISLAMABAD (November 22 2008): An Indian delegation headed by Permanent Commissioner for Indus Waters (PIWC) Sujay Mathur is reaching Lahore on November 29 to visit Maralla Headworks to verify Pakistan claim of reduction in Chenab inflows. Well informed sources told Business Recorder that the Indian delegation will check the data of inflows of previous months to reach any conclusion.

The sources said, Punjab government would submit its loss assessment report after the harvesting of rice crop in Sialkot and Narowal, which would be forwarded to India for compensation. Presently, Pakistan is urging India to accept that it had violated Indus Water Treaty by reducing Pakistan's water share and demanding compensation for loss.

Earlier, the government on Tuesday announced that it would drag the recalcitrant Indian government into international arbitration if appropriate compensation in the shape of money, or water, was not given to Pakistan for the damage done to matured crops in Punjab due to stoppage of Chenab water in August. The Indus Water Treaty was brokered by the World Bank and it is significant that India, as the upper riparian country, never violated the treaty even during its three wars with Pakistan.

During the government of B.J.P., India commenced violations by first constructing Baglihar Dam and more recently by disallowing the agreed water inflow into Pakistan Chenab. Under the Treaty, India cannot reduce the flow in Chenab River below 55,000 cusecs between June 21 and August 31 whereas Pakistan received as low as a discharge of 20,000 cusecs during August/September 2008.
 
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Calcutta News.Net
Wednesday 26th November, 2008 (IANS)

India Wednesday sought to allay Pakistan's concerns about the alleged diversion of water from the Chenab river and underlined that water will be distributed according to the Indus Waters Treaty.

'We never stopped the flow of water as per the Indus Water Treaty. It depends on the availability of water at discharge points,' External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee said after holding talks with his Pakistani counterpart Shah Mehmood Qureshi here.

'If there is no adequate water, both sides suffer,' he said at their joint press conference.

He was replying to a question by a Pakistani journalist on whether India will compensate Pakistan for the alleged loss of water amounting to 22,000 cusecs that has severely affected crops in that country.

Underlining that 'no misunderstanding' should be created on this issue, Mukherjee assured Pakistan that water will be distributed according to the letter and spirit of the 1960 Indus Water Treaty.

'Water commissioners and experts are meeting to find a mechanism to share data and information,' he said.

Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari had recently said that the row over the sharing of the Chenab waters could affect bilateral ties.

Last month, the water commissioners of India and Pakistan held talks to address the issue of reduced water flow in the Chenab river which Islamabad alleges has been triggered by the construction of the Baglihar dam in Jammu and Kashmir by New Delhi. India has denied any violation of the treaty.

According to reports in the Pakistani media, Pakistan is considering to demand compensation for the alleged massive loss of more than Rs.40 billion due to the water losses in the river that has affected cultivation in its territory.
 
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yup , compensation is in order - poor farmers and common man only want to have "do waqt ki Roti" , why deprive them of that.
 
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NEW DELHI (November 27 2008): Pakistan sought a "mechanism" on Wednesday to settle a dispute with India over water from the Chenab river, a row that Islamabad says could harm warming ties between the two nuclear-armed rivals. Pakistan accuses India of violating a 1960 treaty by reducing the flow of water down the river, which flows from the Indian side of the Kashmir region into Pakistan.

India is building a dam on its part of the Chenab and Pakistan fears a shortage of water for irrigation as a result. "We should see a mechanism is available and we should avail that mechanism to address this issue," Pakistan's Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi told reporters after meeting his Indian counterpart.

"I am reassured that the Indian leadership is conscious of respecting the Indus Water Treaty in letter and spirit." The treaty divides up control between India and Pakistan of several rivers draining into the Indus river basin. A World Bank team of experts conducted an inquiry into the dispute in 2005 but did not make its findings public.

Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari said last month he would write to the Indian prime minister asking him to resolve the dispute which could harm bilateral relations that were improving since the two sides started a peace process in 2004.

Indian Foreign Minister Pranab Mukherjee said his country did not wish to deprive its neighbour of water from the Chenab, but said the problem was water scarcity. "Even at the highest of our conflict and divergence of views between our two countries we did never stop flow of water as per the agreement," he said. "...If (water supply) is not adequate both sides suffer." He said officials from the two sides would try to find a way to share data so that there would be no misunderstanding.

India has rejected Pakistan's contention that its Baglihar dam on Chenab reduces the flow of water and says the project is crucial for power-starved Kashmir, the disputed Himalayan region over which the two sides have fought two wars. The two sides described Wednesday's meeting as constructive, making progress on a host of thorny issues, but there was little movement forward on the issue of Kashmir.

ANOTHER REPORT ADDS: Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi said that plight of prisoners was another issue which was discussed to provide relief to them. He said launching of trade across Line of Control is a landmark step. Both the countries will take measures to resolve the problems being faced by the traders, he added.

About enhancing trade between Pakistan and India, he said Pakistan has expanded its positive list of trading articles. If India addresses the issue of non-tariff barriers on exports from Pakistan, the trade will be enhanced, he said. Responding to a question on the visit of Indian cricket team to Pakistan , he said Pakistan welcomes the team and assures all necessary security to it. He said already, Indian tennis players and shooting team are participating in Pakistan.
 
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LAHORE (December 02 2008): Federal Labour and Manpower Minister Syed Khurshid Ahmad Shah said on Monday that if India tries to block Pakistan's share of water in the River Chenab then they would take their case to the International Court of Law. He expressed these views while taking to newsmen here after a function of Peoples Unity, a PIA trade union. He also said that Pakistan would not forgo its share of water.

To a question, he said Karachi does not belong to one particular ethic group, it belongs to everyone. He also said that anti-sate elements were involved in the Karachi firing incidents.

While addressing the function, the minister talked about the recent terrorist attacks in Mumbai. He said India should realise that Pakistan is also a victim of terrorism. He stated that Pakistan does not believe in destabilising neighbouring countries and it is playing a vital role in the war against terror in the world. He urged India to avoid blame game and asked India for its co-operation in joint effort to check terrorism in the region.

According to him, the Pakistan People's Party (PPP)'s government is committed to control inflation in the country, a decrease in prices of various essential items including petrol, diesel, ghee and sugar is reflection of its efforts in this connection. The prudent policies of the present government has helped in controlling the price hike, in contrast prices of all items were increasing in the international market due to the global financial crisis.
 
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EDITORIAL (December 02 2008): India's Indus Water Treaty Commissioner G. Ranganathan visited the Marala Headworks to assess the flow of Chenab with his Pakistani counterpart, Jamaat Ali Shah. A historical perspective with respect to the Treaty as well as Marala Headworks in particular is critical to understanding the strength of Pakistan's case in this particular instance.

The Indus system of rivers comprises three western rivers - the Indus, the Jhelum and the Chenab and three eastern rivers - the Sutlej, the Beas and the Ravi. With minor exceptions, the Indus Water Treaty, brokered by the World Bank, gives India exclusive use of all of the waters of the eastern rivers and their tributaries before the point where the rivers enter Pakistan. Similarly, Pakistan has exclusive use of the western rivers. Chenab, the bone of contention in the recent instance, is a western river.

Marala, located in Sialkot district, is a huge hydro-engineering project built in 1968 with a maximum discharge of 1.1 million cusecs. It was designed to control water flow and flood control in river Chenab - a 1086 km long river which originates in the Kulu and Kangra districts of Himachal Pradesh, fed by the tributaries, Chandra and Bagha, as it enters Jammu and Kashmir near Kishtwar. The Indus Water Treaty requires an inflow of 55,000 cusecs to Marala Headworks. Pakistan's contention is that in the month of August water inflow was as low as 22,000 cusecs.

It is relevant to note at this point that the Indian governments had abided by the Indus Water Treaty even when the two countries were at war. However, with growing energy shortages in India, the Indian government announced the building of several dams - including Baglihar - that violated the spirit and letter of the Treaty. The government of Pakistan protested against Baglihar dam; however, our case presented for arbitration to the World Bank, as per the Treaty, was weakened by the inordinate delay in seeking arbitration - a delay that was in India's interest because it allowed India to complete the construction of Baglihar and present it as a fait accompli rather than as a proposed project whose construction could be negotiated.

And the Pakistan government, in spite of statements in this regard, has still to present its case to the international court. Many in Pakistan argue that the government must hasten to table its concerns for arbitration with respect to Kishan Ganga dam because any delay in doing so would enable India to present that as a fait accompli as well.

Why did the Indian Indus Water Treaty Commissioner deem it prudent to visit Marala at this point in time? Because the Indians refused to accept the water data provided by Pakistan and alleged it was 'incorrect'. It has been reported that the Pakistani Irrigation officials briefed the Indian Indus Water Treaty Commissioner that prolonged stoppage of water by India led to the closure of Marala-Ravi link canal for several months that adversely affected crops across the Punjab.

One wonders if they succeeded in convincing the Indian Indus Water Treaty Commissioner, given his agenda. However, the Pakistani Punjab is the food belt of the country. With the country currently grappling with extremely adverse macroeconomic indicators, the present government had focused on attaining agricultural self-sufficiency as a means to dealing with foreign exchange problems facing the country.

The fact that the Indian government has compromised Pakistan's capacity to provide irrigation water to Punjab, is being termed as economic terrorism by many in this country. To deal with this requires going to the several fora available, arbitration as well as seeking justice at the international court, and ensuring that decisions in this regard are taken promptly and competent lawyers hired, domestically or internationally, to deal with the issues.
 
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India rejects Pakistan’s demand for compensation


Gargi Parsai
NEW DELHI: India has rejected a demand from Pakistan officials for “compensation” for alleged “reduced flows” into the Chenab river after the first and one-time filling of the newly constructed Baglihar dam in Jammu and Kashmir, maintaining that the charge was “unsubstantiated.” The 450 MW hydroelectric project was commissioned in August last.

An Indian team of experts led by Commissioner (Indus) in the Water Resources Ministry G. Aranganathan that visited Pakistan for on the spot inspection held the view that there was discrepancy in the manner in which water flows were measured at Merala barrage on Chenab. The team returned here on Thursday after a three-day visit.

While the outflows were measured, there was no mechanism to measure inflows into Merala barrage. Pakistan has charged India with not maintaining an inflow of 55,000 cusecs at Marala, as is mandatory under the Indus Waters Treaty of 1960, during the initial filling of the Baglihar dam. The filling is a one-time event.

The Indian side was unable to inspect the records at Merala so as to verify the veracity of Pakistan claims with regard to water flows, according to sources.

According to the official sources, the data supplied to the Indian delegation was of the outflows, while there was no mechanism to measure inflows.

“The water level data was fluctuating and did not reflect the inflows at Merala,” the sources said.

During the period there was flooding in Ravi, which waters were used for irrigation in addition to the Chenab waters, the sources claimed.
 
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LAHORE (December 16 2008): The government has started taking several measures to face serious Indian threats to its mainstay agriculture sector following its blockade of river Chenab water during August-September 2008 in violation of the 1960 Indus Water Treaty between the two countries.

Official sources told Business Recorder that the Punjab Irrigation and Power department has decided to carry out feasibility study for developing new water reservoirs at Marala and Chiniot in close collaboration with Wapda to meet the shortage of water in Chenab River.

Chairman Wapda will hold a briefing for Senior Minister Raja Riaz and the Irrigation department high ups on December 22 at Old Bridge, Chiniot, to apprise them about the study. Pakistan Government has also decided to build the tactical Mangla-Marala Canal (MMC) to counterbalance the adverse influence of any potential Chenab water obstruction by India.

According to Ministry of Water and Power sources this project will supply water to approximately ten million acres of land in those cultivable areas of Punjab that were hit by the illegal Indian blockade of water from the Baglihar dam.

The Mangla-Marala Canal will take water from the Mangla reservoir to Marala headwork and from there to the planned areas of Punjab and Sialkot. Wapda will start primarily this work in collaboration with Engineering Corps of Armed Forces, Nespak and Punjab government to take water from Jhelum River to those channels of the Chenab River that would be facing water shortage.

Another proposal under consideration is to take water from the Indus (Kalabagh) River to the Jhelum River and from the Jhelum to Chenab River. It may be added that under the Indus Water Treaty 1960, India cannot reduce the flow in Chenab River below 55,000 Cusecs between 21st June and August 31, 2008, whereas Pakistan had been receiving a discharge of as low as 20,000 cusecs during August-September 2008.

The water blockade is termed by farming community, agronomists and government sources as "an attack on agriculture economy of Pakistan and Indian economic terrorism" that badly hit three main Kharif crops of cotton, rice and sugarcane over ten million acres of land in Punjab at their maturity stage and caused loss of several billions of rupees to the Pakistan economy.

Pakistan took strong notice of reduced water flow in Chenab river and described it "an open and serious violation of the treaty under which Pakistan obtained exclusive rights for the three western rivers namely Indus, Jhelum and Chenab.

The Pakistan Indus Water Commissioner Syed Jamaat Ali Shah inspected the Baglihar Dam in Occupied Kashmir in late October 2008 and confirmed that India had stored over 0.2 million acre ft (MAF) water in the dam in gross violation of the IWT. Pakistan has demanded of India to supply 0.2 MAF stolen water to Pakistan for sowing of wheat and other Rabi crops as it was facing more than 35 per cent shortage of water.

The Indian Indus Water Commissioner visited Marala on river Chenab near Sialkot on 29th November to verify the water inflow data at the headwork on Pakistan side but so far New Delhi has not responded to Islamabad's demand. Meanwhile the water inflow in the river on Monday at Head Marala was historic low at 5,500 Cusecs and outflow 1,000 Cusecs.
 
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LAHORE (December 16 2008): Punjab Irrigation Department has decided to conduct a special feasibility study in collaboration with Wapda for the construction of new water reservoirs on River Chenab at Marala and Chiniot. The Senior Punjab Minister, Raja Riaz Ahmed said this to a delegation of students from Agriculture University Faisalabad on Monday.

According to a handout, Wapda Chairman will give the Irrigation Minister and senior officers of the department a briefing on this project on December 22 near old bridge in Chiniot. The minister said that Irrigation department has decided to undertake computerised monitoring of water channels for fair distribution of Irrigation water.

He said that Punjab Information Technology Board is developing a special software is being developed for the purpose at a cost of Rs 207 million. The project would be launched in 2009-10. Riaz said that instructions have been issued to farmer organisations to seek police help to prevent water theft.

Irrigation Minister said that GIS system is also being developed to monitor canals. 'It is being developed by the Programme Management and Implementation Unit of the Irrigation department,' he added. Canals reforms are vitally linked to agriculture output therefore practical measures are being taken for their success, stressed the minister.
 
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DELHI CLEARS CONTROVERSIAL KISHENGANGA PROJECT

GK NEWS NETWORK / UNI

Srinagar, Jan 26: It seems India has opened up one more front to put pressure on Pakistan in the aftermath of Mumbai attacks after using diplomatic pressure and war rhetoric. The government of India has cleared the controversial Kishenganga Hydroelectric Project in the state at a revised higher cost. Pakistan had raised objections over the project, saying it violated the Indus-Water Treaty which guides the flow of rivers to Pakistan from India.

The government cleared the project at a revised cost of 3642 crore.
“‘Pakistan had raised some questions about the project but we are sure it fully complies with the Indus Water Treaty of 1960 between the two countries,” Home Minister P Chidambaram told reporters.


He said the project cost had been revised from Rs 2,238 crore to Rs 3,642 crore because of the “change in scope of the project, ecology, law and order, and inaccessibility of the dam area during winters. He said the lowest bidder had quoted a very high price which was reduced by 110 per cent.

He said the project on Kishenganga dam would be completed in time by the National Hydro Power Corporation Ltd.


http://www.greaterkashmir.com/full_story.asp?Date=27_12_2008&ItemID=39&cat=1
 
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India would take our requests seriously. I am sure the justice of the situation was not the only reason that India is compensating Pakistan. Makes sense to have an effective military.

Pakistan does have nukes. Not helping them to sort out Water Issues with India. Get your facts straight, India is not componsating Pakistan.

Infact the Kishenjanga (Spelling) project has got a go ahead despite of Pakistani protest.

River Chenab water blocking: Pakistan will take case to International Court of Law

WB has already ruled against Pakistan if not they have ruled in favor of India.

Last time Pakistan went to International Court of shooting down of Atlantique. Whatever happened to the componsation of that.
 
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Jan 06, 2009 THE statement by Chairman Indus Basin Water Council Commission Hafiz Zahoor-ul-Hassan, that in the wake of the Mumbai attacks and its sabre rattling, India was in reality working on an obnoxious plan to deprive Pakistan of waters of three eastern rivers by speeding up construction work on new hydroelectric projects, must be taken seriously. So far India has, Mr Hassan points out, built around 62 water reservoirs on the eastern rivers of Jhelum, Chenab and Sindh, in violation of the Indus Waters Treaty.

What is worse, scores of other projects are also in the making. According to reports, their completion would allow India to block great quantities of water flowing into Pakistan with adverse consequences for our agriculture and economy. Just a few months back, it cut off our share of the water by illegally storing it in the Baglihar dam, that destroyed standing crops on millions of acres of land. Our Foreign Minister was in New Delhi to press the government to find an amicable solution when the Mumbai attacks occurred and the issue was relegated to the background. Despite the fact that India is trying to engage us in a futile exercise and holding us accountable for the attacks, it should not stop us from pursuing the matter strongly.

BWTR ARTICLE: An obnoxious plan
 
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What is worse, scores of other projects are also in the making. According to reports, their completion would allow India to block great quantities of water flowing into Pakistan with adverse consequences for our agriculture and economy. Just a few months back, it cut off our share of the water by illegally storing it in the Baglihar dam, that destroyed standing crops on millions of acres of land. Our Foreign Minister was in New Delhi to press the government to find an amicable solution when the Mumbai attacks occurred and the issue was relegated to the background. Despite the fact that India is trying to engage us in a futile exercise and holding us accountable for the attacks, it should not stop us from pursuing the matter strongly.

this is old news bhai. always comes every two months on this forum...lol...
 
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this is old news bhai. always comes every two months on this forum...lol...


The date this article was published was on Jan 06, 2009. click on the link I provided.

Well why do Indians expect a friendship with Pakistan, if it plans to make Pakistan a desert depriving Pakistan of its own water, and millions of innocent Pakistanis die. Pakistan and India ties will never improve until India fixes its cruel mentality.
 
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