RIPARIAN WATER RIGHTS
Riparian water rights[1]
(or simply riparian rights) is a system of allocating water among those
who possess land about its source. It has its origins in English common law. It is used in the United Kingdom and states in the eastern United States.
Under the riparian principle, all landowners whose property is adjacent
to a body of water have the right to make reasonable use of it. If
there is not enough water to satisfy all users, allotments are
generally fixed in proportion to frontage on the water source. These
rights cannot be sold or transferred other than with the adjoining
land, and water cannot be transferred out of the watershed.
Riparian rights include such things as the right to access for
swimming, boating and fishing; the right to wharf out to a point of
navigability; the right to erect structures such as docks, piers, and
boat lifts; the right to use the water for domestic purposes; the right
to accretions caused by water level fluctuations. Riparian rights also
depend upon “reasonable use†as it relates to other riparian owners to
ensure that the rights of one riparian owner are weighed fairly and
equitably with the rights of adjacent riparian owners. In the western
United States, water rights are generally allocated under the principle
of prior appropriation, which is derived from Spanish law and treats water as a resource unrelated to land.
NON-MAINTENANCE OF KOSHI DAM
‘Non-maintenance
by India led to Koshi havoc’: A high-level government team that
inspected areas devastated by the flooded Koshi River has held India
responsible for the havoc. The devastation took place as the Indian
side did not carry out repair and maintenance work on the Koshi barrage
and the embankment along the river, thereby violating the Nepal-India
Koshi agreement, said top officials. India is entirely responsible for
repair and maintenance work and operation of the barrage, as per the
bilateral agreement signed in 1954. “Every year in the past the Indian
side used to do at least some maintenance work. But this year they did
not carry out the repairs,†Khom Raj Dahal, Deputy Director General of
the Department of Water Induced Disaster Prevention (DWIDP), told the
Post. “This was the main reason why the Koshi breached the embankment
and submerged about 10,000 hectares of cultivated land and villages.â€
The Indian side used to contact the Regional Directorate of the
Department of Irrigation (DoI) in Biratnagar. The DoI plays a
facilitating role as and when requested by the Indian teams. “But, this
year they did not contact the DoI regional office†Dahal said[2].
POURING FOREIGN AID
After
the government’s call for support to the floods victims of Sunsari,
relief aid continues to pour in from national and international
communities. The European Commission announced a total of 1 million
Euros (Rs 103 million) as the humanitarian aid for victims of Koshi
floods Friday. Food aid and nutritional support will be provided to the
victims through the fund, which will be channeled through the European
Commission Humanitarian Aid department, ECHO, under the responsibility
of Commissioner Louis Michel. This assistance will target up to 50,000
people displaced by the floods, who will receive emergency food aid and
the most vulnerable will benefit from nutritional support through the
World Food Programme, a statement by EU said. Similarly, the
secretaries and staffs of the ministry of peace and reconstruction also
announced to lend financial support. The secretaries will give their
three-day salary while other staffs will spare their one day’s earning.
The staffs of the home ministry contributed over Rs 100,000 and Nepal
Telecom contributed Rs 3 million to the prime minister’s trust for
natural calamities[3].
THE WATER TREATIES AND NEPAL’S POSITION
Nepal’s
freshwater resources flowing down from the Himalayan heights have
attracted the attention of various powerful quarters. While the upper
co-riparian country, China, has not posed any major problem for Nepal’s
water resources, the signing of the first water sharing treaty with
India, the Kosi Agreement, 1954, based on unequal provisions, set the
tone for gradual colonisation of Nepali waters by India. The second
Gandak Agreement, signed in 1959, was also based on unequal
benefit-sharing provisions. The net benefits to Nepal from these
treaty-based huge barrages are predictable: enormous floods during
monsoon and dry spells during winter. The benefit of electricity is
virtually non-existent. These two agreements form the basis of the so
called ‘anti-Indian’ sentiments among a large section of the people of
Nepal, using which all the Communist parties have built their political
base. These agreements were signed when the Nepali Congress (NC) was in
power or sharing power with the monarchy. Since then, NC has never
recovered from the image of being a ‘pro-Indian agent’ selling Nepal’s
precious rivers and waters in order to remain in power in Kathmandu.
Indeed, a bigger sell-out was the signing of the Mahakali Integrated
Development River Treaty in 1996, the cancellation of which was one of
main highlights of the 40-point demand by the Maoists before launching
the People’s War in 1996. The CPN (UML), then considered a
revolutionary party, lost its political base after approving the
Mahakali Treaty. It was humbled in the recent elections. UML general
secretary, Madhav Nepal, paid a heavy price by losing from two
constituencies. Nepal claimed that the Mahakali Treaty stood as a
benchmark in Nepal-India relations. But he did not mention why the
treaty provisions have not been implemented even after 12 years. If it
all had gone well, the Pancheshwar Dam should have been built four
years ago and Nepal should have been receiving billions in benefits and
royalty as claimed by another defeated UML heavyweight KP Oli. Many in
Nepal believe that the controversial Tanakpur and Mahakali treaties are
the main factors behind the murders of the then UML leaders Madan
Bhandari and Jivaraj Ashrit, who were opposed to these unjust
arrangements. Nepal’s three major beautiful rivers are already gone.
India has already gained consumptive rights of water use. The only
major river basin still left was about to be taken by the now dead
Enron - the Karnali River - with the mega Karnali-Chisapani dam
proposed over it. Indian and Russian competitions are underway to grab
the license for its construction. The Saptakoshi High Dam and other
proposals are underway. Indian companies have won the license for
lucrative dam projects in Nepal - Arun III and Upper Karnali.
Australian multinational Snowy Mountain Engineering Corporation (SMEC)
has won the licence for the West Seti project, from which India will
get free water through Karnali and 90 per cent cheap electricity.
However, Nepal will continue to live in darkness. Now, all eyes are set
upon the Maoists. The challenges before the Maoist-led government are
inevitable: these unequal treaties should be reviewed/nullified and new
arrangements should be made on the basis of principles of international
water laws and practices. The licensing of Arun III, Upper Karnali and
West Seti projects could be withdrawn leading to open and competitive
biddings. Before that, Nepal’s primary right to use electric power
domestically and the guarantee of lower-riparian benefits should be
ensured. As for the unilateral embankments constructed in the Tarai,
will they be broken or re-evaluated? If the Maoist leaders fail to
bring any fundamental shift in Nepal-India water relations, which
includes reviewing the controversial 1950 treaty of peace and
friendship, they will be considered as no different from other parties.
Undoubtedly, we need India and its support - but at what cost to the
Nepali people[4]?
RESPONSIBILITIES
Further,
India has been guilty of reneging on the agreement in other ways as
well. For instance, according to the terms of the agreement, India is
responsible for the maintenance, cleaning and siphoning of the barrage.
However, in the last 20 years India has not performed this duty
seriously and sincerely. Nepali people have been victimised by this
severe negligence[5].
Nepal and India signed the Mahakali Treaty in 1996, but despite
ratification by the Nepalese parliament, the Treaty has remained
stalled. Despite these treaties, serious differences over water
sharing, water management and hydropower projects continue to spoil
relations between India, on the one hand, and Pakistan, Bangladesh and
Nepal, on the other. Differences between India and Pakistan continue to
create ill will between the two on around 11 large hydroelectric
projects India plans to construct, including the Baglihar Project, over
which Pakistan has sought the appointment of a neutral expert by the
World Bank after the failure of talks. More than the dispute over Jammu
and Kashmir, the issue of the waters of Jhelum and Chenab has the
potential to once again provoke people in Pakistan against India and
push the two countries to war. Dr Mubashar Hassan has given a sound
proposal to resolve the dispute over Baglihar. He has proposed to
install telemeters on the Baglihar to monitor daily release of water in
order to ensure due supply of water from the Baglihar Dam to Pakistan.
Bangladesh, which shares 54 rivers with India as a lower riparian, has
serious differences with New Delhi that hinder agreement on eight
rivers, besides the continuing complaints by Dhaka over sharing of the
waters of the Ganges. The Indian plan, which is now under review, to
build a big river-linking-project that includes diversion of water from
Ganges and Brahmaputra, has become yet another source of antagonism
between the two countries, which have not been able to sort out their
differences over a whole range of issues that continue to fuel
political tension which, in turn, does not allow the resolution of
differences over water. As an upper riparian, Nepal has a different
relationship with India and faces many problems in constructing its
dams due to opposition by the lower riparian and has serious doubts
about the projects proposed by India. Nepal’s mistrust, beside other
factors, has been reinforced by what it perceives to be various unequal
treaties — starting from the construction of the Sharada Dam (1927),
the 1950 Treaty and the Letters of Exchange of 1950 and 1965, thee
Koshi Agreement (1954), the Gandak Agreement (1959), the Tanakpur
Agreement (1991) and the Mahakali Treaty (1996)[6].
KOSHI MULTIPURPOSE PROJECT [7] : THE REASON FOR THE FLOOD
The
proposed dams in Nepal are in news again and the discussions over the
issue is stale. Jagadanand, then Water Resource Minister of Bihar,
asserted in Bihar Vidhan Sabha (22nd July 2002), ‘…Sir, the last point,
no discharge control-no flood control. Unless the discharge is
controlled, the scientists all over the world are convinced that the
floods cannot be controlled…Embankments do not control the discharge,
they can, at best, prevent water from spreading. Weak embankments
cannot hold uncontrolled discharge and the flood will continue to
bother us as a natural calamity. If we want to control floods in this
state, we will have to control discharge in the upper riparian states
and the neighboring countries. We have had negotiations with them and
have unanimously agreed that to proceed jointly.’ In reply to a call
attention motion of Ram Vilas Paswan regarding floods in Bihar, Arjun
Charan Sethi, Minister of Water Resources at the Center told the Lok
Sabha, on the 22nd August 2003, ‘…So far as Bihar is concerned, we are
having constant interaction with the Government of Nepal because we all
know these rivers originate from Nepal. Unless we have any kind of
agreement with Nepal, this problem cannot be solved. The proposal for
setting up of the Joint Project Office in Nepal for taking up field
investigations and preparation of Detailed Project Report has since
been approved. 100 officials from Nepal, and 42 officials from India
are to carry out field investigations and studies. The project will
inter alia have 269 meters high dam with an installed capacity of 3,300
MW and irrigation benefits accruing both to India and Nepal. In
addition to Kosi Multipurpose Project, it will include Sun Kosi
Diversion scheme as well.’ Similar statement was made by Priya Ranjan
Das Munshi, Central Minister of Water Resources, made a statement in
Kishanganj on the 5th June in 2004. Jay Prakash Narayan Yadav, State
Minister of Water Resources at the Center on the 24th June 2004, while
talking to the press in New Delhi said that a sum of Rs. 29 Crores has
been sanctioned for the construction of the Kosi High Dam (He must have
meant that it was for the preparation of the DPR). As far as
Barahkshetra Dam is concerned, the politicians in India are sticking to
the same statement that dialogue with Nepal is on and on this is since
1947. Jay Prakash Narayan Yadav reiterated his statement again in 2005.
The joint team is working in Nepal for the preparation of the DPR but
its personnel are tight lipped over what they are going to propose and
when. The ghost of the Barahkshetra Dam haunts the planners, engineers
and the politicians ever since the embanking plans of the Kosi was
rejected in favor of a large dam by the Central Government in 1946 and
the statements like the one given by Jagadanand, Arjun Charan Sethi,
Das Munshi or Jay Prakash Narayan Yadav are a matter of routine in the
flood season. The annual report of Water Resources Department of Bihar
(2006-07) has already completed the formality of suggesting that the
solution to the flood problems of Bihar lies in building dams in Nepal
and wants the Center to expedite the negotiations. These negotiations
are, however, going on for the past 60 years. The factual position
about these dams is that they are no way linked to flood control and
the flood victims of North Bihar have been systematically fooled over
years and they will suffer indefinitely at the hands of the
politicians, engineers and the vested interests that are dangling
carrots of these dams for decades. Here is the reason, why. There
are three dams that often come as proposal to solve north Bihar
problems. These are the Chisapani on the Kamla, the Nunthore dam on the
Bagmati and the Barahkshetra on the Kosi. The Report of the
Second Irrigation Commission of Bihar (1994) spells very clearly that
there is no flood cushion provided in the proposed Chisapani Reservoir
on the Kamla. (Vol. V, Part -1, p-511). A Report of the Expert
Committee to study impact of interlinking of river on Bihar (April
2005, Chapter III, p-16) says, ‘…But the proposed Sapta Kosi Dam too
has not been provided with any flood cushion which should be provided
for flood moderation…’ Regarding the proposed Nunthore Dam on the
Bagmati, the Second Bihar Irrigation Commission Report says, ‘…it
appears clearly that even after the construction of dam at Nunthore,
there would be no appreciable flood moderation in the middle and lower
reaches of the Bagmati and obviously further supplementary floods
managements measures would be needed’ (Vol. V Part-1, p-414). A recent
report of WRD of GoB (May 2006) observes that ‘…but none of these
schemes could come up as yet, and in near future also there is little
hope of execution of these schemes (Chapter-V, p-1).’ Thus, there is
neither any flood cushion provided in the design of the proposed dams
nor is there any likelihood of the dams being built in near future[8].
BASED ON COMPILATION OF PUBLISHED NEWS AND ARTICLES AVAILABLE ON INTERNET. THE SOURCES HAVE BEEN DULY CITED.
[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riparian_water_rights
[2] http://ekantipur.com/
[3] http://www.nepalnews.com/archive/2008/aug/aug22/news06.php
[4] http://www.wiserearth.org/resource/view/170bb5be943f13d859de7fd3e39f757b
[5] http://www.wafed-nepal.org/form.html
[6] http://www.nepalnews.com/archive/2005/others/guestcolumn/guest_columns_apr05_5.php
[7] http://www.indiawaterportal.org/blog/index.php/2007/06/
[8] http://www.hardnewsmedia.com/2007/07/1034