Sajjad
Shaukat
Pakistan is a grave victim of water scarcity,
because of being on lower riparian in relation to the rivers emanating from the
Indian-Held Kashmir (IHK). India has never missed an opportunity to harm
Pakistan since its inception; it is creating deliberate water shortages for
Pakistan with the aim to impair Pakistan agriculturally. Historically, India has
been trying to establish her hegemony in the region by controlling water
sources and damaging agricultural economies of her neighbouring states. India
has water disputes with Pakistan, Nepal and Bangladesh. Indian extremist Prime
Minister Narendra Modi who has given the concerned departments to continue
construction of dams has ordered diverting water of Chenab River to Beas, which
is a serious violation of the Indus Water Treaty of 1960. Therefore Pak-India
water dispute has accelerated.
In this regard, an article By: Zofeen T.
Ebrahim, Joydeep Gupta (Co-Authors) under the caption, “India resists
World Bank move to resolve Indus Water Treaty dispute”, published in The Third
Pole and reproduced-updated by a Pakistan’s renowned daily on January 6, 2017 is
notable.
Zofeen T. Ebrahim and Joydeep Gupta wrote,
“India has asked the World Bank not to rush in to resolve a dispute with
Pakistan over the Kishanganga and Ratle hydropower projects. Indian officials
told a World Bank representative in New Delhi on January 5 that any differences
over the projects can be resolved bilaterally or through a neutral expert.
Pakistan has objected to the projects–being built by India in Jammu and
Kashmir–on the grounds that they violate the 1960 Indus Waters Treaty (IWT) between
the two countries. After India rejected the charge, Pakistan has gone to the
World Bank–the designated IWT mediator.”
They indicated, “Islamabad has also asked
the United States (US) government to intervene, and has added the component of
water security to the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) agreement. Of the
rivers in the Indus basin, the Indus and the Sutlej start in China and flow
through India before reaching Pakistan. The other four rivers–Jhelum, Chenab,
Ravi and Beas – start in India and flow to Pakistan”.
The writers pointed out, “The Kishanganga
project is on a tributary of the Jhelum, while the Ratle project is on the
Chenab. The State Department in Washington has already said it wants India and
Pakistan to resolve all outstanding issues bilaterally, a route favoured by
India.”
Zofeen T. Ebrahim and Joydeep Gupta elaborated,
“As the dispute flared up, the World Bank had recently suspended all
proceedings–the setting up of a court of arbitration or the appointment of a
neutral expert. On January 5, World Bank representative Ian H Solomon met
officials of India’s External Affairs and Water Resources ministries in New
Delhi in an effort to break the deadlock.The Indian delegation, led by Gopal
Baglay, Joint secretary in the Ministry of External Affairs, made a detailed a
presentation on the two projects to support their argument that neither project
violated the IWT. After the meeting, a government official told journalists
that the Indian side had described the objections raised by Pakistan as
“technical”, and therefore they would be best resolved by a neutral expert.”
They wrote, “Pakistan has dismissed this
suggestion earlier, and is seeking a full court of arbitration. The World Bank
had agreed to a court of arbitration and then to the appointment of a neutral
expert, leading to objections by both countries. That was when both processes
were suspended. Explore: World Bank pauses dam arbitration to ‘protect Indus
Waters Treaty.’ At the January 5 meeting, Solomon did not raise any question on
the designs of the two projects, according to the Press Trust of India news
agency. Instead, he explored ways to resolve the dispute. With nothing decided,
the World Bank official is going from New Delhi to Islamabad to continue this
effort. The official added that India is fully conscious of its international
obligations and is ready to engage in further consultations to resolve the
differences regarding the two projects. Under the IWT, India is allowed only
non-consumptive use of water from the three western rivers in the Indus
basin–Indus, Jhelum and Chenab.”
The co-authors mentioned, “The Kishanganga and
Ratle projects are on the western rivers. They are run-of-the-river hydropower
projects that do not hold back any water, though Pakistan’s objection is about
the height of the gates in the dams from which water is allowed to flow
downstream. The three eastern rivers–Ravi, Beas and Sutlej–are reserved for the
use of India. Meanwhile, in Pakistan. The Pakistani government approached the
World Bank last September, saying the design of the Kishanganga project was not
in line with the criteria laid down under IWT, and sought the appointment of a
court of arbitration. Since the Kishanganga project has been going on for
years, the “inordinate” delay by Islamabad to approach the World Bank would
give India more time to complete its projects, Jamait Ali Shah, former Indus
Water Commissioner on behalf of the Pakistani government, told
thethirdpole.net”.
Their article pointed out, “However, Pakistan’s
Finance Minister Ishaq Dar wrote to the World Bank on December 23, stressing
that it was not withdrawing its request to set up a court of arbitration. This
was followed by a call from the outgoing US Secretary of State John Kerry to
Dar, saying that the US would like to see an amicable solution to the
transboundary water row. Karachi-based newspaper…quoted diplomatic observers in
Washington to say, “seriousness of this dispute, particularly the fear that it
may harm the treaty, forced Mr. Kerry to make this call.”
The writers explained, “For a while now Pakistan
has also wanted to bring China into the picture. At the sixth meeting of the
Joint Cooperation Committee (JCC) of the CPEC which was held in Beijing on
December 29, a special group on water storage was formed to pre-empt any
“severe water crisis” impacting economic and food security of Pakistan, an
official statement said. After a Chinese delegation visits Pakistan later this
month, the JCC – the highest policy-making forum of the CPEC – may consider
including the Diamer-Bhasha dam into the CPEC agreement. Planned at an
estimated cost of around USD 15 billion, if Pakistan succeeds in getting the
dam financed under CPEC, planning and development minister Ahsan Iqbal would
consider it a “landmark achievement”. Both the World Bank and the Asian
Development Bank have refused to lend money to Pakistan for this hydropower
project. Pakistani experts react leading lawyer and former federal law
minister, Ahmer Bilal Soofi termed the inclusion of water security into CPEC
essentially a |political choice for Pakistan and China” though the issue does
not “squarely fall within the otherwise commercial mandate of CPEC”.
Zofeen T. Ebrahim and Joydeep Gupta wrote,
“Speaking to thethirdpole.net, Soofi said Pakistan and China need to exchange
notes on a “contradicting state practice of India as an upper riparian to
Pakistan and a lower riparian to China, that will help both the states to
confront India.” He further added that Pakistan should raise its voice at an
international level that “India’s building of reservoir and fully utilising the
water storage capacity under the treaty poses a serious threat to Pakistan in
particular backdrop of India’s present posturing as it improves India’s
capability to manipulate water flows into Pakistan.” This was echoed by former
commissioner Shah who said the international community should be duly briefed
about the “dilution of the violation of the provisions of the treaty” by India.
At the same time, he said both countries should continue to work closely and
quietly to resolve the grievances and find a middle ground”.
They added, “The recent stance by India where it
“lobbied aggressively and influenced” the World Bank, he feared, had further
undermined the already “fragile” treaty. “The WB needs to take the right
action–which is to act as arbitrator in this matter, as it has done before,”
pointed out water expert Simi Kamal.The reason why the IWT, 74 pages long with
12 articles and 8 annexures and has no expiry date, has worked so far, she said
was partly because the Bank acted as a third party. “The Bank needs to maintain
this role and not back off now, when its arbitration role is most required in
the face of a belligerent Indian government.”
According to the writers, “Kamal further said
the solution lay not in the pause by the Bank “or for hawks to call for
dismantling the treaty”, but for both governments to act responsibly and for
the Bank to play its role in "containing adventurism by either
government–in this matter the Indian government”. Shah also felt when Pakistan
plans to proceed with such cases, it never does its homework thoroughly and
therefore always appears the weaker party. The same was endorsed by noted
economist Kaiser Bengali when he told thethirdpole.net that he found “the intellectually
deficient and politically inane manner in which Pakistan has been pursuing the
matter”, criminal. Bengali had little confidence in the Pakistan IWT team. He
said, “It has no strategy on dealing with water issues with India. Pakistan’s
chief negotiator for more than a decade and a half had limited intellectual
capacity to lead on such a strategically life and death issue,” he said”.
They indicated, “He said Pakistan keeps harping
on the "spirit" of the agreement. “Four decades after a treaty is
signed, what matters is the letter of the print, not the spirit of the time
when the document was signed.” Bengali believed India was not violating the
letter of the agreement. “India has been building power plants on western
rivers, but not diverting any water”. Nor, he said, were Pakistan’s contentions
on the design "substantive enough to warrant a full scale confrontation”.
He also observed, like Shah, that differences can and should be resolved in a
more “low key” manner. He feared that since India was not violating the treaty
per se, if Pakistan does take the latter to court, it will meet the same fate
as the Baglihar Dam case of 2007”.
Zofeen T. Ebrahim and Joydeep Gupta maintained,
“While Indian officials maintain that they are sticking to the IWT, the
government has hardened its stand in recent months after attacks on Indian Army
camps in Kashmir by suspected militants. (Read: South Kashmir's role in
anti-India struggle) New Delhi had earlier said it was setting up a task
force to examine what projects it could undertake in the three western rivers
of the Indus basin under the ambit of the IWT. In the last week of 2016, the
government announced that the task force would be headed by Nripendra Mishra,
principal secretary to Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi.”
Nevertheless
in light of the above article, it is mentionable that since the 9/11 tragedy,
international community has been taking war against terrorism seriously, while
there are also other forms of bloodless wars, being waged in the world and the
same are like terrorism. Political experts opine that modern terrorism has many
meanings like violent acts, economic terrorism etc., but its main aim is to
achieve political, economic and social ends. Judging in these terms, Pak-India
water dispute which has become serious needs special attention of the US and
other major powers, as India remains stern on her illegitimate stand in this
respect.
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