Blood and water cannot flow together: PM on Indus treaty
Work On
It With Sense Of Urgency
“Bloodand water cannot flow together,“ Prime Minister Narendra Modi said on Monday as
he chaired a review meeting of 56-year-old Indus Water Treaty during which it
was decided that India will “exploit to the maximum“ the water of
Pakistan controlled rivers, including Jhelum, as per the water sharing pact.
Held
amidst heightened tension between the India and Pakistan, the meeting also
decided to set up a inter-ministerial task forces to go into the details and
working of the Treaty with a “sense of urgency“, senior government sources
said.
Attended by National
Security Advisor Ajit Doval, Foreign Secretary S Jaishankar, the Water
Resources Secretary , and senior PMO officials, the meeting also noted that the
meeting of Indus Water Commission can “only take place in atmosphere free of
terror“.The Commission has held 112 meetings so far.
“Prime
Minister's Modi's message at the meeting was that `rakt aur paani ek saath
nahin beh sakta' (blood and water cannot flow together),“ sources said.
Apart
from deciding to exploit to the maximum the capacity of three of the rivers
that are under Pakistan's control Indus, Chenab and Jhelum-in the areas of
hydro power, irrigation and storage, the meeting also agreed to review the
“unilateral suspension“ of Tulbul navigation project in 1987.
The
sources asserted that the decision to maximise the water resources for
irrigation will address the “pre-existing“ sentiment of people of Jammu and
Kashmir, who have complained in the past about the treaty not being fair to
them.
The meeting
came as India weighed its options to hit back at Pakistan in the aftermath of
the Uri attack that left 18 soldiers dead, triggering de mands that the
government scrap the water distribution pact to mount pressure on that country.
Under the treaty, which was signed by Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru and
Pakistan President Ayub Khan in Septe mber 1960, water of six rivers Beas,
Ravi, Sutlej, Indus, Chenab and Jhelum -were to be shared between the two
countries.
Pakistan
has been complaining about not receiving enough water and gone for
international arbitration in a couple of cases.
(TOI)
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