India has decided to stop the flow of its share of water to Pakistan from rivers under the Indus water treaty, a move
Water resources minister Nitin Gadkari tweeted to convey the decision of the government to stop India’s share of water flowing to Pakistan.
But the actual implementation of the decision may take up to six years as dams as high as 100 metres will have to be built to stop such flow, officials said, insisting the decision was in no way a violation of the Treaty and was only aimed at getting the rightful due to people of the country.
Under the Indus water treaty signed in 1960, the waters of the western rivers—the Indus, Jhelum, and Chenab—was given to Pakistan and those of the eastern rivers—the Ravi, Beas, and Sutlej—to India.
India’s share of water from Ravi, Beas and Sutlej rivers came to 33 million acres feet (MAF).
While about 95 per cent of the water was being used in the country after the construction of three main dams across the rivers, close to 5 per cent water or 1.6 MAF would flow to Pakistan.
To gain access to this water, India is now building more dams which will be completed in six years, officials said.
Another official said the decision was taken two months back.
Water to Pakistan from the three rivers has been flowing for 60 years while the country needs the same to meet needs of its citizens, they said insisting stopping of its share of water from going to Pakistan is in no way a violation of the Treaty.
“Under the leadership of Hon’ble PM Sri @narendramodi
He further said, “The construction of
Gadkari’s tweets have come barely a week after the Pulwama attack on February 14 in which as many as 40 CRPF personnel were killed when a militant rammed an explosives-laden vehicle into a bus carrying them. New Delhi believes the attack was planned and supported by elements in Pakistan.
Following the attack, the government revoked the
“We have started the work of purification of river Yamuna … After the formation of India and Pakistan, Pakistan got three rivers, and India got three rivers. The rightful water of our three rivers was flowing to Pakistan. Now we will build three projects on them, and
The union cabinet in December had approved the Shahpurkandi dam project on the Ravi river in Punjab, a move that was intended to help India arrest its share of water flowing into Pakistan.
For this,
The IWT was signed between India and Pakistan in 1960 for sharing of Indus waters. According to the Treaty, India got the full rights for
“Some of the water of the Ravi river at present is going waste through the Madhopur headworks downstream to Pakistan. Implementation of the project would
In September 2018,
Though the work on the project began in 2013, it was halted due to certain issues raised by J&K.
The Punjab government also submitted a revised cost estimate of Rs 2,793.54 crore and requested the Centre to include the project in the
The project, when implemented, will enable the up-stream Ranjit Sagar dam project power station to act as a peaking station, besides having its own generation capacity of 206 MW and irrigation benefit of 37,173-hectare to Punjab and J&K.