The
Baglihar dam issue is an issue in
India-
Pakistan relations.
On
January 10,
2005, Pakistan told India to
suspend work on a
dam in
Jammu
and Kashmir "before negotiations could resume" on a water row,
warning that the issue could "sour a broader peace process" between
India and Pakistan. The river water dispute centres on India's
construction of the US$ 1 billion
Baglihar
hydropower dam on the
Chenab River which flows from the part of
Jammu
and Kashmir under Indian control into Pakistan. Pakistani
foreign ministry insisted that India stop construction as a minimum
measure.
Pakistan said that it could resort to
World Bank arbitration under the terms
of a
1960 bilateral pact on
sharing of river water(
Indus Water Treaty). Pakistan has
objected to the design of the dam, saying it would affect water
flows into Pakistan and contravene the water-sharing treaty
brokered by the World Bank. India has said that the power project
does not propose to store water and will not disrupt flows. Under
the treaty, India has rights over waters of the
Ravi,
Sutlej and
Beas
rivers while Pakistan has rights over the waters of the
Indus, the
Chenab and the
Jhelum. All the rivers flow from India into
Pakistan.
Later that month, the World Bank said that it will
not interfere in the Baglihar dam issue. It clarified that Pakistan
and India will have to try and thrash out the issue first and that
it will only help establish a
court of arbitration, that too
after all other steps have failed.
The bank had informed the
Governments of India and Pakistan on April 25 that it has
determined that it is required to comply with the request of
Islamabad to appoint
a Neutral Expert under the terms of the 1960
Indus Water Treaty, as both the countries failed to resolve the
issue through bilateral dialogue.
After consulting India and
Pakistan, the World Bank has appointed a Swiss expert to
address
differences between them concerning the project. The bank appoint
Professor Raymond Lafitte, a civil engineer and professor at the
Swiss Federal Institute of
Technology in Lausanne, to take stock
of the contentions of both India and Pakistan.
"Professor
Lafitte...will be asked to make a finding on differences between
the two governments concerning the construction of the Baglihar
project," it said, adding that his findings will be made known in
time. It also made it clear that his
determination will be final
and binding.
External links
India Daily -
"Controversial Baglihar dam issue stalemates India Pakistan
peace talks" report dated January 11, 2005 "More talks linked to
stoppage of work: Baglihar dam issue" Dawn.com article
dated January 13, 2005 "World Bank denies
being treaty guarantor: Baglihar dam issue" Dawn.com
article dated January 19, 2005