Pakistan asks India to share data of J-K Kishanganga dam
“We recently asked Indian authorities for Indus waters in writing to give us dates for inspection of the Kishanganga dam as soon as possible,” Pakistan’s Commissioner for Indus Waters Syed Muhammad Mehr Ali Shah told Dawn newspaper on Thursday.
IANS | Islamabad | October 5, 2018 12:27 pm
Pakistan has asked India to immediately share the data showing inflow and discharge of water at the Kishanganga hydropower project in Jammu and Kashmir, a media report said on Friday. It has also sought dates for inspection of the 330MW hydroelectric project that India had agreed to during a two-day meeting held in August in Lahore between Indus water commissioners of the two countries. “We recently asked Indian authorities for Indus waters in writing to give us dates for inspection of the Kishanganga dam as soon as possible,” Pakistan’s Commissioner for Indus Waters Syed Muhammad Mehr Ali Shah told Dawn newspaper on Thursday. “Through a letter, we have also pressed Indian authorities to immediately share the data concerning flows of water at the river and releases/discharges, in/outflows at the dam with us under the relevant provisions of the Indus Water Treaty. “We are receiving water at Jhelum basin in our territory, but to ascertain our need or requirement we need data India is obligated to share with us time to time,” he added. During the 115th meeting of the Permanent Commission for Indus Waters, India had agreed to allow Pakistan to inspect the projects built on the Jhelum basin, including the Kishanganga hydroelectric project, in the near future. Similarly, Islamabad had agreed to allow New Delhi to carry out an inspection of the Kotri barrage over the Indus. Besides Kishanganga, India had also agreed to let Pakistani experts inspect sites of two hydropower projects – 1,000MW Pakal Dul and 48MW Lower Kalnal at Chenab basin – by the end of September. But the inspections were postponed. Shah told Dawn that Pakistani authorities wanted to have a detailed tour of the Kishanganga project since Pakistan had already raised various objections to its design and construction. The project was inaugurated by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on May 19 in Jammu and Kashmir’s Bandipora district. Islamabad has accused New Delhi of violating the Indus Waters Treaty — a 1960 water distribution pact between India and Pakistan — by setting up the dam. The Kishanganga project was delayed for several years as Pakistan dragged India to the International Court of Arbitration, which ruled in India’s favour in 2013.
Peoples Conference president Sajjad Lone on Wednesday sharply criticized Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Omar Abdullah's remark on the Indus Water Treaty, dismissing them as "right-wing gibberish" intended to appease the BJP.
When the Indian ministerial team commented that “the atmospherics were good,” it seems an opportune moment to peer through the broken bridges of diplomacy between the two neighbours, who suffered the horrors of Partition and then a series of wars, entrenching international powers in the sub-continent amidst a continuing arms-race.
Ahead of his visit to Pakistan for the SCO Heads of Government meeting on October 15-16, External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar on Saturday said he is not going to Islamabad to discuss "India-Pakistan relations" but to attend a multilateral event. He said he is travelling to Pakistan only to be a "good member of the SCO".