The beauty of
Indian propaganda is that whenever the Indian government is in a tight corner
some nonissue is blown out of proportion and suddenly the issues disappear from
the scene like everyone must have observed these days that there was a roar
about the serving Indian naval officer’s apprehension by the Pakistani
intelligence agencies and then there was a hullaballoo about water stealing by
the Indians, nevertheless, suddenly all these sensitive issues are no more
there. The Indian agencies, government and the media are whole heartedly
spending their time and efforts on Mian Nawaz Sharif and his family’s cases.
There is so much to talk that it can’t be cover in just one write up but
there is no harm in taking a less discussed topic and that’s the stealing water
share of Pakistan by India.
Some connoisseurs
believe the only recognized case of a “water war” happened about 4,500 years
ago, when the city-states of Lagash
and Umma went to war in the Tigris-Euphrates basin. However, Adel Darwish, a
journalist and co-author of Water Wars:
Coming Conflicts in the Middle East, says modern history has
already seen at least two water wars and he quotes former Israeli prime minister
Ariel Sharon confessing on record that the reason for going to war [against
Arab armies] in 1967 was for water,” Yet another example is of Senegal and
Mauritania also, who fought a war starting in 1989 over grazing rights on the
River Senegal. And then Syria
and Iraq too, have fought
minor skirmishes over the Euphrates
River. Mark Twain gave a
famous quote that “whisky is for drinking; water is for fighting over”.
No one would have
ever given a serious thought to it but unfortunately a series of reports from
intelligence agencies and research groups indicate the prospect of a water war
is becoming increasingly probable. The seasoned and mature forecasters
from the world over are showing lost sleep for wars of the future, those
will be fought over blue gold, as thirsty people, opportunistic politicians and
powerful corporations, battle for diminishing resources. Nevertheless,
here in the Subcontinent, the Indians are least pushed about the hovering
conflict clouds and rapidly building dam after the dam. Out of 13 dams or
hydroelectric projects, under construction in Indian occupied Kashmir, seven
are on River Chenab; one is on Jhelum and one on the Indus.
An Indian
environmental scientist Sunita Narain, soon after receiving her 2005 Stockholm
Water Prize Award from King Carl Gustaf XVI of Sweden in Stockholm said,
“I am not here as a pessimist saying that India is doomed and that water wars
are going to happen, and we are going to destroy ourselves. I am saying very
clearly that if India
continues on this route, yes there will be water wars…and we will become more
and more crippled in our growth,” When Sunita said that, “Water wars are not
inevitable. It lies in our hands and in our minds…,” (to obviate them) it was
not just to receive a cash award and a crystal sculpture. In fact she said that
as an assiduous director of the Centre for Science and Environment in New Delhi and as the
publisher of a highly praised environmental magazine Down to Earth. If some
political experts hold the view that the world’s future wars will be fought
over water and not over oil, they are not wrong in saying so.
The only
difference is that while most of the nations will fight to get water, some
ill-fated nation like ours will continue to fight not to have water, as is
being done these days. Deforestation in hilly areas, the urbanisation of flood
plains, the sea level rise due to global warming, increased melting of snow and
exceptional rainfall, are not phenomena exclusive to one or the other region.
Rather, these are problems faced globally by every country. Water is the sole
reason for which almost over 10,000 dams have or are being constructed in the US, and over 300 water storage facilities are
being constructed in India
and China.
The need to
provide food and water has not been relegated to the back burner elsewhere;
hence new dams are being planned and constructed throughout Asia.
There are presently about 99 dams under construction in China, 100 in Turkey,
81 in Korea, 25 in Iran and around 292 in India. Nearly
3200 major / medium dams and barrages had been constructed in India by the
year 2012. As compared to that only 9 dams and that too disputed one, have been
planned by Pakistan.
Imagine the political instability in these countries if there was half as much
disinformation against these dams as is the case against the Kalabagh Dam
(KBD). Do we still need to find out what makes all these other dams feasible
while ours is a disaster?
The tumult and
uproar of those so-called nationalist parties, that don’t even have proper
district representation, is totally baseless and purely meant to grab
attention. Their sightless efforts are geared towards opposing the KBD at any
cost, come what may. There is a famous Pashto saying — and who knows it better
than Asfand Yar Wali, the self-acclaimed champions of Pashtun rights — ‘You
cannot have a head without a headache.’ When a dam is being built there will
always be some drawbacks and negative fallouts. But these are not restricted to
KBD only.
The opposition
has deliberately refrained from evolving a consensus. Not a single political
leader has picked up the courage to come forward and drive some sense into the
minds of others except for Imran, who has been dragged into another kind of
nuisance. When they are invited to the table to talk, they refuse to sit
across and listen to others’ points of view. If they have some valid
trepidations about the flooding of the Peshawar
valley or Nowshera town or the adverse effects on Mardan’s SCARP, and
dislocation of a large number of people, they should shun prejudices and listen
to others’ assessments as well. I am certain that the nation’s water experts
have a solution for their ‘headaches’.
Ironically this
handful of nationalists appears to have exactly the same objectives as the
Indians. In April 1948, India
diverted the flow of the Ravi, Sutlej and Beas rivers, an act that threatened
to destroy irrigated cultivation in Pakistan. Today, why divert, rivers
allocated to Pakistan
under the subsequent water accords and construct dams like Baglihar on them
unless the intention is equally malafide? It is very unfortunate that all the
main opposition parties who claim a national stature seem to have been hijacked
by a handful of misguided people. Another tragedy is that the Punjab
is irrationally being dragged into the controversy. The moot question is why
those who can unite for any specious cause cannot unite for their motherland?
It is high time that everyone teams up for this national project and militates
against the jingoistic and intolerant attitudes.
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