Hydro Nationalism

As SAARC prepares to meet in Dhaka, they must understand that our rivers bring us together, and river engineering projects should not be used to break us apart.
Published on

The Ganges Water
Diversion: Environmental
Effects and Implications
M. Monirul Qader Mirza
(Edited)
Dordrecht; Kluwer
Academic, 2004
Water Science and
Technology Library.

Political differences and mutual recriminations have long characterised the uneasy Indo-Bangladesh bilateral relationship. Among the primary issues of contention between the two states has been that of water-sharing of the Ganga River. The construction of a barrage by India at Farakka in West Bengal diverted the river water into two distributaries, thereby reducing the water inflow into Bangladesh. While India saw this construction as a sovereign right, Bangladesh held it as a violation of its own rights as a lower riparian country. In 1996, after close to two decades of political deadlock on the issue, the two countries arrived at an agreement on mechanisms of water-sharing that determined the extent of Bangladesh's right to access the river's dry season flows. But even though a political agreement has been reached, the barrage and its impacts remain hotly contested in both India and Bangladesh.

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