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Pak army is ‘water thief’
Pakistani authorities have accused the army and paramilitary troops of ‘blatant water theft’ in Punjab province at a time when the country is facing a major shortage of water and electricity generated by hydropower projects.
The irrigation department of Punjab has urged Chief
Minister Shahbaz Sharif to "immediately take up the matter at (the) appropriate level".
In a summary or official note to Sharif, the department said water theft by "state agencies greatly undermines its moral authority" to take action against farmers and other influential people involved in the same crime.
The document said the issue is not limited to water theft but goes much beyond it and sets dangerous precedents.
Army and Pakistan Rangers formations are using stolen water to irrigate encroached lands, it alleged.
More land is encroached every year and more water is required, resulting in still higher incidence of water theft. In recent months, differences over sharing of river waters have emerged as a major irritant in relations between India and Pakistan.
Pakistan has often accused India of diverting its share of waters from rivers in Jammu and Kashmir though New Delhi has denied the charges.
The land-grabbing and water theft are promoting a culture of rent-seeking among the units concerned, the document said.
Citing specific cases, the document stated that the army's Corps IV, which has a firing range near the Abbasia Link Canal in Bahawalpur region, has leased out land to private individuals called army contractors who have laid illegal pipes and lift water through pumps.
The paramilitary Pakistan Rangers has established two unauthorised outlets and the army three more on the same canal, the Dawn newspaper quoted the document as saying.
The army has also installed 15 pipes on Hakra Right Channel and the army and Pakistan Rangers are thus jointly "stealing" 356 cusecs of water in Bahawalpur zone alone.
The army and its tenants are tampering with 16 outlets on a water distribution scheme in Okara district.
This is in addition to ‘five unauthorised outlets’ on the same system.
These 21 outlets have made it impossible for the irrigation department to ensure equitable distribution of water in the local system.
In Sheikhupura division, army formations laid 44 pipes on nine channels of the Upper Chenab Canal of Lahore zone during the Kharif season of 2009 and Rabi season of 2009-10, the document said.
"Water theft has become a serious issue over the past two decades and is seriously affecting canal operations and equitable distribution of water.
"Theft by influential people at the head-reaches results in water shortage and deprives the poor farmers at the tail of these channels. Against this backdrop, water theft by state agencies robs the department of any moral authority to go after small farmers," the document said.
The irrigation department's efforts to correct the wrongs have met with force.
In Bahawalpur zone, a team comprising the SDO, canal magistrate, naib tehsildar, SHO of Derwar and police force went to remove illegal pipes on July 17, 2008.
When the team started removing pipes, about 500 armed army contractors gathered to resist their efforts, the report said.
The police overpowered them, impounded their weapons and arrested some of them.
One illegal outlet was plugged. Later, army officials reached the site, ordered the team of officials to stop removing pipes and release the contractors.
They abused the SDO and took him away. The SDO was released after the intervention of the local superintending engineer, the document alleged.
The water theft by state institutions is creating a "dangerous precedent" for other users and greatly undermining the irrigation department's legal and moral authority.
The matter needs to be taken up at the appropriate level with the army and Pakistan Rangers to stop water theft from the irrigation system, the document said.
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