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Old 09-24-2011, 04:49 PM   #1 (permalink)
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Talking ICA stops India from constructing Kishanganga Dam

ICA stops India from constructing Kishanganga Dam


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ISLAMABAD: The International Court of Arbitration (ICA) Saturday issued an interim order, stopping India from going ahead with the controversial project of Kishanganga Dam, Geo News reported.

Under the ICA order, India will not construct a permanent structure over River Neelum or at the site of Kishanganga, according to a statement issued by Presidential Spokesman of Pakistan.

India will not go ahead with building a structure that may affect the flow of water stream, the spokesman said.

He further said that Pakistan had sought from India an undertaking for construction in the light of international law which the latter had rejected. This led Pakistan to go to ICA which has now issued the interim order on the issue.

ICA stops India from constructing Kishanganga Dam
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Old 09-25-2011, 05:11 PM   #2 (permalink)
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Default Re: ICA stops India from constructing Kishanganga Dam


India told to stop work on Kishanganga dam


The International Court of Arbitration passed a unanimous order on Pakistan’s application for ‘interim measures’ against the construction of the Kishanganga dam on Saturday. – File Photo

ISLAMABAD: The International Court of Arbitration (ICA) has barred India from any permanent works on the controversial Kishanganga hydro-electricity project (KHEP) on River Neelum at Gurez in occupied Kashmir in response to Pakistan’s appeal for ‘interim measures’ against the dam which may inhibit the restoration of the river flow to its natural channel, the government announced on Saturday.

The arbitration court took the decision on an appeal filed by Pakistan that India was diverting the flow of the river and violating Indus Water Treaty (IWT) between the two countries, said Farhatullah Babar, spokesman for President Asif Ali Zardari, on Saturday.

The court of arbitration passed a unanimous order on Pakistan’s application for ‘interim measures’ against the construction of the Kishanganga dam.

The court order said: “India shall not proceed with the construction of any permanent works on or above the Kishanganga/Neelum River bed at the Gurez site that may inhibit the restoration of the flow of the river to its natural channel.

Pakistan and India shall arrange for periodic joint inspections of the dam site at Gurez in order to monitor the implementation of the court’s order.”

Islamabad had submitted its version in the World Bank’s arbitration court in July. The major contention was that under the law India cannot divert the route of River Neelum. Pakistan fears that the Kishanganga dam would rob it of 15 per cent water share – a violation of the Indus Water Treaty.

Islamabad accused Delhi of trying to divert the water of Neelum river in order to harm Pakistan’s Neelum-Jhelum hydro-electricity project.

In its application Pakistan had sought: “A stop work order; An order that any steps India has taken or may take in respect of the KHEP are taken at its own risk without prejudice to the possibility that the court may order that the works may not be continued, be modified or dismantled, that India be ordered to inform the court and Pakistan of any imminent and actual developments on the Kishanganga Dam that may adversely affect the restoring of the status quo ante or that may jeopardise Pakistan’s rights and interests under the treaty; Any further relief the court considered necessary.”

The president’s spokesman said the office of the special assistant to the prime minister on water resources and agriculture, the team of legal experts from Pakistan and abroad who prepared a tremendous case, NESPAK and PCIW of the ministry of water and power attended the hearing at the Permanent Court of Arbitration at the Hague.

India told to stop work on Kishanganga dam | Newspaper | DAWN.COM
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Old 09-25-2011, 07:29 PM   #3 (permalink)
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Default Re: ICA stops India from constructing Kishanganga Dam

India has no choice but to comply on this matter.
I think Pakistan should maintain a solid stance in this.

It's understandable that India's 1+ billion population need the water for various reasons, but we also have 180+ million people who need their fair share aswell.

No concessions should be made.

Something tells me that future conflicts will be going about the divertion of these rivers and the fight for water.
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Old 10-27-2011, 02:13 AM   #4 (permalink)
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Default Re: ICA stops India from constructing Kishanganga Dam

Kashmiris hail dam ruling

By Athar Parvaiz

GUREZ, Jammu and Kashmir - A ruling by the International Court of Arbitration (ICA) at The Hague, staying construction of a dam across a river in Indian-administered Jammu and Kashmir that flows into Pakistan, has brought cheer to the tribal people who live around the site.

"If the ruling of the international court actually stops construction activity I would be the happiest man alive," Abdul Majeed Najar, a farmer, told Inter Press Service (IPS). "We do not want to be relocated from our ancestral lands."

Few would want to move out of this idyllic, alpine valley, which stretches 80 kilometers in the high Himalayas and is home to the Dard Shin tribe. Through the valley flows the Kishenganga, called the Neelum after it crosses into the Pakistan-administered part of Kashmir.

Najar and other Dard Shins have refused compensation offered by the Indian government at rates twice the prevailing value of land in the Gurez Valley, which falls in the Bandipora district of Jammu and Kashmir state.

"The government promised us twice the going rate per acre of land, but we are not willing to leave our homes and move to other parts of Kashmir," Najar said.

What may save the Dard Shins, who speak a language that is unique and endangered, is the September 24 ruling by the ICA banning "permanent works on or above the Kishanganga/Neelum riverbed at the Gurez site that may inhibit the restoration of the flow of the river to its natural channel."

Essentially, the ICA considered favorably a plea by Pakistan asking for a stay on further construction of the central government's 330 megawatt Kishanganga Hydroelectric Project (KHEP) that is now 40% complete.

Pakistan had argued that Kishanganga dam stands in violation of the 1960 Indus Waters Treaty signed by India and Pakistan to share the waters of the Indus and its five tributaries - the Jhelum, Chenab, Ravi, Sutlej and Beas.

Under the treaty, Pakistan has exclusive use of the western rivers, the Indus, Jhelum and Chenab, while India has exclusive rights to the eastern rivers - Sutlej, Beas and Ravi. All the rivers ultimately flow into Pakistan.

Pakistan is building a 969 Mw dam under the Neelum-Jhelum Hydroelectric Project downstream, which Islamabad contends will be affected by the KHEP.

After bilateral negotiations collapsed in April last year, Pakistan took the case to the ICA as a violation of the World Bank-mediated Indus treaty, which provides a mechanism for resolution of disputes over the waters of the Indus basin.

The KHEP calls for the relocation of more than 1,200 people from at least six villages in sparsely populated Gurez valley that falls on the Line of Control, the de facto fenced and patrolled border separating the Indian and Pakistani controlled parts of Kashmir.

"I have four acres of land [1.6 hectares] on which I cultivate different crops like pulses, potatoes and maize worth thousands of dollars, apart from grazing my cattle and sheep on the same land," Abdul Razzaq, another Dard Shin farmer, told IPS.

"Owning the land not only means food and a livelihood for me, it also represents security for our future," Razzaq said. "Any compensation from the government may keep me happy for some time, but it means an irreparable loss for my son and three daughters.

"We made our objections clear when the government informed us about the construction of a power project, but that did not seem to have any impact," Razzaq said. "Who cares about the opinions of poor people like us who live in the mountains?"

Children in Gurez are equally upset. "As you can see I am helping my mother collect hay, after attending school," said Saima Shafi, who is in the sixth grade. "I can't ever think of leaving the water in our mountain springs and going elsewhere."

An environmental impact assessment (EIA) carried out by Delhi University's Center for Inter-Disciplinary Studies of Mountain and Hill Environment warns that the dam will endanger several Himalayan plant and animal species, including the snow leopard and black bear. The EIA concluded that ecological habitats face the danger of disturbance, degradation and fragmentation because of the heavy deployment of labor and construction activity.

According to the EIA, more than 500 hectares of land, including cultivable and forested areas, are likely to be affected by the project.

The Kishanganga project is being executed by the public sector National Hydroelectric Power Corporation (NHPC) at a cost of around US$560 million through the Hindustan Construction Co and Britain's Halcrow Group.

Political leaders in Jammu and Kashmir say that while Pakistan and India wrangle over the resources of the territory there is little benefit from hydroelectric projects for the Kashmiris.

Nayeem Akhtar, spokesman for the main opposition People's Democratic Party in the elected state assembly, told IPS: "We don't think that what happened in a court in the Netherlands makes any difference to us because we are never consulted by either country. They [Pakistan and India] capitalize on our water resources while we remain mute spectators. What is happening is a huge fraud on Kashmiris, the main stakeholders."

Akhtar said Jammu and Kashmir continues to be power starved, although it has the potential to produce 20,000 Mw of electricity from hydroelectricity projects.

Shakeel Qalandar, president of the Federation of Chamber of Industries Kashmir, told IPS that all the energy produced by the NHPC in Jammu and Kashmir is supplied to other Indian states while local industries and domestic users are starved of power.

Qalandar is part of a group that in July filed public interest litigation in state high court seeking the handover of all NHPC projects to the state government. "How can we progress unless we have steady power supplies?"

Asia Times Online :: Kashmiris hail dam ruling
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