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India going ahead with Tipai dam

india already started building this dam where is our government and the opposition party? they make huge buzz in this matter initially but right now they are mutt.its a very shame full that we cannot together even in this crisis moment.we should have convey our concern about this matter strongly to international media and international tribunal about the consequence of this dam.
 
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Heavenly Ganga, The Farakka Barrage and its Atrocious Aftermath...

Reflections, Lessons, and Questions

Mr. Jatin H. Desai

What have been the effects of Farakka Barrage on Bangladesh?
Between 1975 and 1976, India withdrew the maximum amount of water from the Ganges. Several studies have been carried out, attempting to determine the agricultural, economical and ecological effect on Bangladesh at that time and the repercussions since.

The water levels were at the lowest they had ever been during the dry season of 1976, causing the suction pumps, hand pumps and hand operated tube wells to be incapable of operating in such shallow water. Also, an increase in salinity was discovered, most likely the result of sea water traveling upland because the fresh water downward flow had decreased.

For instance, in the town of Khulna, which is situated on the Rhupsa-Pussur and is particularly sensitive to changes in the Ganges flow, the saline intrusion was considered to be the most dramatic. Khulna is a major area of industry in Bangladesh and it appears that the salinity changes have caused industrial losses of millions of U.S. dollars. This is only an estimate but, if we consider the possible occurrences when industries are faced with unexpected levels of salt in their water, such as production delays, mechanical failure, increased corrosion, then such losses are indeed plausible.

The effect on agriculture in Bangladesh is a source of dispute - Bangladeshis believe the Farakka Barrage is responsible for reduced rice and other crop yields but India rejects this claim. The Sundarbans (world’s largest estuarine forest) have also shown signs of deterioration through increased salinity, chlorine levels, and insufficient nutrients in the water. There are mixed conclusions as to the ecological effects of the Farakka Barrage, but there is a strong presumption that the barrage has caused declining fishing.


The damage to agriculture, farming, and industry has been in the thousands of crores People living in the area, claim that the increased salinity is threatening their crops, industry and animal drinking water. It is unlikely that Bangladesh will receive compensation for the losses they claim, since in so many areas, it has been impossible to prove that Farakka is solely responsible. Nevertheless, it is beyond doubt that the people of South Bengal have suffered greatly as a consequence of the Farakka Barrage.

The damage caused to the local agriculture industry due to the lack of availability of water is irreparable, to say the least. It has been calculated that if Bangladesh had access to the same quantity of water as before, the country could have produced 36 lakh tons more crops valued at 2300 crores of Taka ($335 Million USD).

Agriculture being the mainstay of the economy of this tiny south Asian nation, there is no way to recoup this devastating loss. Increase in salinity in the vast south-western region of Bangladesh is having ruinous effect in various ways, from diminished crop-production, fish-catch and power generation to reduced industrial output. Some species of valuable trees in the Sundarbans are also known to be disappearing consequent upon salinity increase.

The damage due to withdrawal of waters at Farakka has been so wide and multidimensional that it is difficult to estimate. However, careful estimates put it to the tune of 11 thousand crores of Taka (almost $2 Billion USD). This does not include damage to the environment which defies any precise calculation. What is more, if the rate at which the flow in the Ganges is dwindling continues, the river which has been flowing since thousands of years will be reduced only to a gigantic trough without any water therein.

The Implausible Devastation

As inhumane and intolerable as it sounds, this is not the worst. To experience today, how the dam has affected life and livelihoods on the Ganges in this part of the world, one needs to travel to Panchanandapur, a small town in West Bengal. On a map, it appears to lie well inland from the Ganges. But today, something unbelievable has happened to Panchanandapur and the village's approximately 5,000 residents.


Panchanandapur is being swallowed by the Ganga
In the middle of 2007, it was precariously on the banks of the Ganga instead of its original origin – approximately six miles westward. Mr. Kalyan Rudra, a geography professor in Calcutta, explains that the dam forced the Ganges to shift almost six miles eastward over the last 30 years, eroding most of this village. By last year, an indigo factory, sugar mill, hospital, police station and a two-story government building were all swallowed by the river among other settlements, while Ganges was moving towards the small village.

Today, less then ten months later, the Ganges has completely swallowed Panchanandapur. In fact it has been moving so fast, that now, the original western part of the town which was once underwater has reappeared on the other side of the river bank in Bangladesh. Can you imagine? The local West Bengalese farmers have actually been able to identify their land property on the other side of the river after the river swallowed it few years back.

As envisioned, the Farakka barrage was built at the narrowest point on the Ganges to divert water to Calcutta to the south and flush out the silt that was clogging up its port. But scientists now say the project was ill-conceived from the start: Water upstream from the dam carried massive amounts of silt, dropping it directly behind the dam. The buildup — almost 700 million tons annually — has clogged the dam's gates and raised the river bed more than 20 feet. The silt buildup has also forced the river to change its course, swallowing villages and buildings.

So here you are. Imagine you are a West Bengalese who lived all your life in this small village and was the owner of the generational business and the property. Due to the Farakka barrage, your entire life’s belongings are gone – literally overnight. Your family is homeless and without shelter. Your children have no future ahead any longer. You cannot just get up and go, because all you know is to either fish, or run a small business for the locals. Your most prized possession is the land property that you can pass down to your children and the future generations. You have nothing left to run with – no single belonging. You are not the only one. Everyone you know is also going through the same tragedy, trying to support each other. You are asking the deep questions - why did the government do this, and why to me and my family? And why did God do this? And what is there to live for any longer? and so on.

Somehow you survive through the wild destruction caused by heavy rains and the trajectory of Ganga - but not everyone you know was lucky enough to save their families. One day, after months of survival instincts and support of the villagers, you discover that pieces of Panchanandapur village are reappearing on the other side of Ganga. With brevity, you take a small boat and cross the river to find your own property. Sure enough, you do. You are able to recognize the landmarks to prove your belongings and that of your neighbors.

Alas, you can feel some Divine Hand in all this. How could this be? You are shocked. Maybe, you tell your self, this was all due to past Karma, and it’s over. Somehow you will figure out how to get back on track. You and some of the villagers are now starting to ‘settle’ into this newly found land on the other side of Ganga.

As interesting as it sounds, it’s not over.

These impacted villagers on the ‘new’ side of Ganga, still consider themselves part of West Bengal. The shift in geography has opened a territory question; neither West Bengal nor Bangladesh recognizes these displaced villagers. These villagers are country-less as of today.

The Real Insights from Man-made Disasters

Originally, in early 1960s, the Farakka Barrage was envisioned to revive industrial survival of Calcutta by the Indian government. Here, Man (primarily the government officials) decided to change the course of the Goddess Ganga to create materialist benefit for himself. Man put all of his intellect, spent millions of dollars, poured resources, and muscled his political power to fulfill selfish goals – that of industrial success. All of this was done in the name of ‘his country’.


Calcutta (Kolkata) has benefitted by redirecting the waters of the Ganga, but not without consequences
The tide of change that has engulfed humanity in the last two centuries - through the industrial revolution and beyond, has inevitably, and visibly, left its mark on the Ganges. It is true that due to the Farakka Barrage, the city of Calcutta has greatly benefited in numerous categories, including commerce.

These same industries as of now, unfortunately, have accelerated discharge into this river as well. Once, Ganga was known for its purity, now it is rendered unsafe for consumption. While it used to be considered meritorious to die and be cremated in Benares, the very belief causes further pollution of the river - given the un-sustainable rate at which partially cremated cadavers are dumped into the river.

The dawn of the information revolution and the internet has brought thoughts from around the world in close contact as never before. As a newly generated affluence generated by the boom in the information industry spreads across the world, life styles across the Indian subcontinent are undergoing a sea change. It is only a matter of time, before a semi-urban style of life will establish itself in hitherto remote areas.

Man, will continue to exploit the nature to gain materialistic success. He will justify the decisions without deeper, long term effects they might have. Because, he has armed himself with belief that materialists growth is the only way to define success – at individual level, at level of society, and at the grander level of political strength, which is, in fact, the ultimate self-deception.

The Self-Deception

In spite of these waves of change, the core of the eastern belief in the interconnectedness of life remains unchanged. The simple act of thanksgiving - through the offering of a clay lamp, on a leaf with a few petals of fresh flowers to the life sustaining waters of the Ganges, at the culmination of the Ganga Aarti - carried out even today - night after night at Haridwar, where the Ganga enters the plains, is a standing testimony to this immutable undercurrent of the religious thought. Here lies the irony.

As explicit and visible the traditions are today, one needs to wonder how deeply rooted are the human unconscious behaviors. It is very easy for us to start blaming the short-sightedness of those who were involved with designing, approving, funding, and building the Farakka Barrage in early 70s. It is also very easy, now, for us to see the deeper insights of destruction that was not available before the project was undertaken.

I wonder if such insights were available, whether the project would have continued. I question myself, if the engineers who built the barrage, knew about the potential design problems that would force Ganga to divert itself, leading to such massive destruction to human lives and uproot streams of villages near by. I wonder if the business community in Calcutta cared about the possible danger the barrage would have to Bangladesh and West Bengal neighbors before it was built.

What is critically important is for all of us to look around at the large scale decisions that we, the human beings, are passively or actively making everyday around us that may be having negative impact on other lives. It is not too hard to find other current examples – the Afghan war, the Iraqi invasion, the unrest in Kashmir, etc. I wonder how many of us are supporting (with voice or without opposing voice) societal projects that may have negative environmental sustainability forecast in the long term.

We, as our beloved Bhagawan loving calls us, the monkey minds, spend all of our time living within our small cocoon. We are, generally, too busy to understand or act for anything that does not ‘belong’ to us or our livelihood. We have outsourced our decision making to the ego within – which operates on autopilot. We have convinced ourselves that life needs to be ‘simplified’ by acquiring worldly-pleasures while ignoring the ‘dirty headlines’. That is the job of the government, we say, why else do we pay taxes? The self-deception is so strong that we have fully convinced our self that this is the reality and everything is ‘Karma’. We might even say, “Well… the barrage was supposed to happen. It had to occur, because it was meant to be. It was written in the grand plan that those villagers had to pay their karmic debt.” This is the self-absorbed ego with a veil covering the reality.

[About Writer: Mr. Jatin Desai is the Co-founder and CEO of The DeSai group based in Connecticut, USA. A seasoned business executive, strategic advisor, and a coach for senior leadership teams, his firm has among its clients many of the Fortune 1000 companies. Jatin has written papers, addressed numerous conferences, and conducted training workshops for corporate executives on many subjects including Living with Human Values and Spirituality in the Workplace. More importantly, he has been a devotee of Bhagavan Baba since 1975 and has been an active office bearer at the local and regional level of the Sai Organisation in the northeast region of USA. Additionally, Jatin also guides young children as a teacher in the Sathya Sai Education program in USA every week.]

Feature Articles: Heavenly Ganga, The Farakka Barrage and its Atrocious Aftermath... - May 2008
 
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india already started building this dam where is our government and the opposition party? they make huge buzz in this matter initially but right now they are mutt.its a very shame full that we cannot together even in this crisis moment.we should have convey our concern about this matter strongly to international media and international tribunal about the consequence of this dam.

Our current govt run by Awami regime actually support indian activities if you are watching events. Opposition has protested on the issue and made noise but not enough. What they are lacking or not doing is being persistent in their protest and making active noise in international forums. But you also have to consider geo political reality around us. There is limitation what opposition can do at this point other than taking stand against govt that supports indian dam. But citizen like us has great responsibility to do our best to make different international organization aware of indian water terrorism.
 
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Events after the dam is built will no more be controlled by the GoB or BD people. GoI will do whatever it wishes to do. It happened all the time in the past. So, we can expect much of this water will be diverted under some pretext. BD will suffer as a result.

This is a self-centered and self-righteous India. No other country can beat India in terms of broken promises. India's mind-set is different from others.


there is world bank................there is international court.............there is asia development bank...................There is UN.............


Every country is free to complain if any other bigger more powerful country violated here rites:partay:

But we got Hasina aunty.:lol:.........bangladesh will not go to anywhere
 
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The damage caused to the local agriculture industry due to the lack of availability of water is irreparable, to say the least. It has been calculated that if Bangladesh had access to the same quantity of water as before, the country could have produced 36 lakh tons more crops valued at 2300 crores of Taka ($335 Million USD).



The damage to agriculture, farming, and industry has been in the thousands of crores
 
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Why India will refrain from from taking its future benefits?

If they will build the dam then our food production will fall down and then India will get the chance to export more food in BD in higher cost which ultimately will made BD more India-dependent.

LOL, who cares weak and feeble BD, so called Tiger?
 
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OMG...more India hating. :angry:

Why dont u ppl go to UN or world bank and put a case over there against India for water theft inspite of spitting vitriol over here..?

Yeah i know..ur country will not go there...because they have no genuine case.
Ur officials just blame India for their own inefficiency in managing the water resources properly.
And the Jamatis here are having a field day in swallowing it and go on a India-Bashing rant over here.
 
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India, the Water Terrorist and SAARC

16th SAARC summit was held at Thimpu, capital of Bhutan from April 28 -29, 2010. People of the participant countries are looking towards their leaders for establishment of regional peace in this highly adverse security environment. They feel that future of their new generation has become highly insecure due to poverty, continuous deteriorating living environment, terrorism and major regional conflicts like territorial and water issues that has brought the region to the brink of a major disaster, the nuclear war. Let’s hope that this time our leaders find some solutions to resolve Kashmir issue, water issue, and Bangladesh border clash with India and Nepal Energy crises, Afghanistan problem and other bilateral matters for lessening our worries for the betterment of our future. Without resolving these major issues initiatives like ‘Aman Ki Asha’ nothing more than hypocrisy.

The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nation mentioned in its report that rural poverty and food insecurity has been intensified and is showing downward trend all over the world. Developing countries within the Asia-Pacific region represent more than half of the world population. Today, a total of 3.7 billion out of 6.3 billion people in 2000, which continued to grow at 1.4% per year (1990-2000) and slowing down to 0.7% per year in 2020-2025 live in this region. The population in urban areas will increase from 37% to 51% during the same period. The report further reveals that majority of the worlds poor live in this region, about 829 million out of a world total of 1.2 billion, living on an average of just one dollar a day.

An alarming aspect of under discussion issue is that despite having maximum manpower, natural resources and all weather pieces of land, why Asian countries failed to bring Green Revolution. The answer is simple, the expansionist designs of India that does not allow its neighbours to settle down and concentrate inwards. New Delhi never realized that her wishful thinking of attaining supremacy and capturing natural resources is pushing the region into war. She has forgotten that hunger is the only factor which changes the human characteristics. It gave birth to the world terrorism too. Here, in the region, if we have the highest peak, the Mount Everest the poverty is also matching in the same dimension. Most of the governments in south Asian region cannot maintain even daily necessities of their nations. Pakistan and Bangladesh have been directly threatened by chocking their water resources; Bangladesh may not be able to react militarily but Pakistan can hit back and hit hard.

Nepal, with which India entered into an agreement to supply power if Nepal allowed her to build hydel projects over its rivers. After having built the projects, India has turned the power supplies off to further squeeze Nepal. Who can trust India? Only a fool or who has no option to walk away from her.

India has added a new dimension to the war philosophy by using water as an instrument of war. It is also worth mentioning here that India is the only country which is having conflicts with its bordering countries while all others in the world want peace at their borders. She is constructing more than 300 dams to interlink her rivers. Out of these 71 dams are being constructed in Indian Occupied Kashmir alone, which defiantly is provoking Pakistan. She has the intentions of converting her neighbours land into ruins and deserts through inundation and trickling of water. In this regard her actions speak that she is emerging as a “Water Terrorist” in the world. New Delhi has planned number of barrages and dames by violating international water pacts. Now, it’s the talk of the region that future war would be on water issue because none of the country will like to become barren as result of Water terrorism. Therefore, it is evident from the prevailing environment that if world community failed to control water grabber then insecurity of food would be the core issue of future Asia and would prove fatal for the world peace.

It is further emphasized that Agriculture sector is expected to continue to play the central role in achieving sustainable food security and poverty alleviation through increasing the food production, improving productivity and quality, expanding non-farm employment and enhancing trade and overall capital formation. But, the increase in capital is only possible if water resources shall be available to the countries. But unfortunately the major supporting element of future development revolves around Water. Unavailability or shortage of water might lead into environmental degradation, erosion of top soils, and depletion of soil fertility, pollution, starvation and low production of food.

The third word countries that are already suffering from depleted economies have to do something for their survival. The numbers of water issues of South Asian countries though have been taken up on various international fora but are still unresolved or pending due to disinclination attitude of India towards in execution of already concluded International Pacts.

Indus Basin Water Treaty between India and Pakistan 1960, Indo-Bangladesh water dispute over the Farakka Barrage (The Ganges Water Treaty) and the Indo-Nepal dispute over the Mahakali River are the glaring ones and endangering to the regional peace. It is notable here that India always used water as tool against Pakistan Nepal and Bangladesh. The Indian rulers exploit this natural resource through blocking the flow of rivers which originate from the Indian controlled territories and claiming their rights of using Nepalese Origin Rivers too.

It is also notable here that major water issue between two nuclear powers (India and Pakistan) is directly linked with the territorial dispute too. Pakistan and India have fought four wars over Kashmir. The sources three major rivers are located in Indian Held Kashmir (IHK). India has started construction of dams and barrages over these rivers with the aim of destroying agriculture sector of Pakistan. According to the sources, India has also suggested Afghan government to construct dam over Kabul River which is the major water contributor to Indus. She has also offered her technical assistance to Afghanistan. Therefore it’s a proven fact now that India will never be our trust worthy friend because of her mean nature. Her only aim is to create instability, destruction of Pakistan. Her ingress in Afghanistan is again questionable. She is using Afghan soil for fomenting terrorism in Pakistan.

Pakistan, Bangladesh and Nepal have tried to resolve their water issue with India. These countries also used SAARC platform to settle these long outstanding issues but some how on one pretext or other New Delhi showed her unwillingness in resolving the issue. India straightaway refused to come on

SAARC forum while saying that water dispute will be solved with Bangladesh and Nepal through tri-partite dialogues. In fact India is not interested to resolve the issues at all and will keep on avoiding the situation. Same situation is prevailing between Pakistan and India over water problem.

The reluctance of India in resolving basic issues is further depleting the regional security. In his regard probably, the political and military leadership of India have either failed to comprehend the real threat or deliberately causing insecurity for the completion of their hegemonic design. The ruling party of India is trying to corner the lonely Islamic nuclear power without realizing that Pakistan can not afford anymore conventional war with India. She must know that Pakistani nuclear programme is though very safe but off course in strong hands too. According to A Q khan Pakistan Nuclear Programme is of latest version and has edge over Indian nuclear programme too.

Pakistan has sufficient nuclear arsenals too. Careful analysis of current political and security environment dictates that future nuclear war would be on water issue. India must know that Pakistan can go for nuclear strike first, since it’s the matter of her survival on the world map. To avoid this nuclear war, we have to establish, deliberate and redress the major water issues of Pakistan, India, Bangladesh and Nepal. Present SAARC Summit is again providing the chance and forum our leaders to resolve the major regional issues

Untold Facts Blog Archive India, the Water Terrorist and SAARC
 
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North-East India protests against big dams

Special Correspondent

To mould public opinion against construction of big dams in North East India, thousands of people - mostly peasants -- took to the roads in Guwahati in Assam on Wednesday.

The rally was organised by the Krishak Mukti Sangram Samiti (KMSS) of Assam to protest the construction of the Lower Subansiri hydroelectric project on the tributary of the Brahmaputra that flows down to Sylhet region in Bangladesh.

Medha's warning
Medha Patkar, a noted Indian environmentalist and social activist who earned global recognition for her leading role in Narmada Bachao Andolan, remained at the forefront of the protest rally.

She warned that the people of Assam and the northeast India would revolt if such dams are allowed to go ahead. "Construction of dams would kill the Brahmaputra and kill the people of the region and we shall never let such projects to continue", she said.

Referring to the expert committee report on dams, Patkar informed that even the report clearly pinpointed that the dams would leave unparallel destruction as its downstream impact.

Big dams won't be allowed
She urged all the Chief Ministers of the NE States to make a concerted move against construction of big dams "or else the agitation will reach its pinnacle."

"At no cost will the construction of big dams be allowed," she warned, threatening to further intensify the movement against anything destructive to nature. KMSS leader Akhil Gogoi urged the people to gear up for the challenges that lay ahead.

"Big dams are lethal to our cause and movement against it would continue. Rights over our land too would not be compromised with," he said. Public activist Deven Dutta and organizations including AASU, All Mising Students' Union, AJYCP, MASS, etc., expressed their support to the campaign.

HOLIDAY > FRONT PAGE
 
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India is self obessed by its hypothetical might. History tells us that "golden bird" obessions had always caused rapid demise of India after establishing itself. Dialouge with India is just a delay and time waste tactic. The brahmin facist politics rely on exploitation of mutal trust for self-benefit. The future of South Asia is very grim with poverty and devastation riddled smaller states habouring staunch anti india sentiments. Yet they continue to cry foul about terror issues harvested by their own policies.

If India aims to corner smaller nations by policy of systematically dehydrating and starving them then it will only give rise to "maroo ya marr do" idealogies in Pakistan causing it unleash its nukes as last resort measure.
 
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India is self obessed by its hypothetical might. History tells us that "golden bird" obessions had always caused rapid demise of India after establishing itself. Dialouge with India is just a delay and time waste tactic. The brahmin facist politics rely on exploitation of mutal trust for self-benefit. The future of South Asia is very grim with poverty and devastation riddled smaller states habouring staunch anti india sentiments. Yet they continue to cry foul about terror issues harvested by their own policies.

you have captured heart of indian deception and consequence. Great one bro.
 
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