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Deal on sharing Teesta water between Bangladesh and India

Foreign Minister Dipu Moni yesterday said a treaty would soon be signed with India on sharing the water of common river Teesta.

“We discussed and agreed to sign a deal on sharing water of the river Teesta,” Dipu Moni, who returned home on Thursday after a four-day visit to India, told journalists at the ministry.

“Both the sides agreed to expedite the ongoing negotiation process so that a treaty is signed soon,” she said, adding that the deal might be signed when Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina would go on a visit to India.

Dipu Moni hoped that the agreement would be inked soon after the joint hydrological observation team comprising experts from Bangladesh and India prepared the draft on water availability and other related issues.

During dry season, the river Teesta faces water crunch as India has constructed Gozaldoba Barrage in the upstream and divert water from the common river that enters greater Rangpur region of Bangladesh.

Bangladesh and India had dialogues on sharing of water of the Teesta for years.

According to Bangladesh Water Development Board, Bangladesh’s Teesta barrage (first phase) in the downstream covers irrigation of 750,000 hectares of land.

Asked whether Anup Chetia to be handed over to India, the foreign minister said Dhaka’s agreement with New Delhi is only on transferring sentenced persons. “Anup Chetia has already finished his jail term and will not come under the purview of the agreement,” she said.

As per the agreement, Indian citizens sentenced in Bangladesh would be able to finish their rest of the jail terms in India if they apply to Bangladesh government. This goes vice versa for Bangladeshi prisoners in India.

Indian separatist leader Anup Chetia was caught in Bangladesh in 1997 for intruding into Bangladesh. He has recently finished his jail term.

Terming the four-day visit very successful the foreign minister said New Delhi would allow products from land-locked Nepal and Bhutan via India.

Dipu Moni said both the countries have agreed to discuss and resolve all the existing issues as a “package programme.”

All unresolved bilateral issues that include sharing of water of common rivers and extradition of criminals will be settled through discussion, said the foreign minister.

Dipu Moni said Bangladesh would have transit link to Nepal and Bhutan as per the latest agreement with India.

In return, India would be allowed to use Ashuganj port for only transporting sophisticated machinery to Tripura to set up a power plant there, she said.

Dipu Moni said India would sell Bangladesh 100 megawatts of electricity “on priority basis” after connecting the power grids of the two countries.

She said some important deals would be signed with New Delhi during Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s upcoming visit to India.

On the controversial Tipaimukh dam, the foreign minister said the Indian premier and ministers gave assurance that India would not do anything that can be harmful to Bangladesh.

Dipu Moni said Bangladesh would soon send a letter of objection to the UN against India’s maritime claims that overlap Bangladesh’s maritime boundary in the Bay of Bengal.

Referring to the Akhaura-Agartala rail link, she said the Indian government would fund the project.

The foreign minister said the issue of improving the service of Dhaka-Kolkata passenger train had also been discussed.

“The Indian side has agreed to take initiative for completing customs and immigration formalities on the train to reduce travel time by five to six hours. But the modalities have to be figured out by the officials concerned of the two countries,” she added.

Foreign Secretary Mijarul Quayes, among others, was present at the briefing.
S: The Daily Star

September 18, 2009 - Posted by positivebangladesh | Bangladesh's Good News | | 1 Comment

1 Comment »

  1. Tipaimukh Dam, a potential seismic bomb for S Asia
    Daily NEWAGE DHAKA
    October 2, 2009
    http://www.newagebd.com/2009/oct/02/edit.html
    In the light of findings of Sichuan earthquake, seismic vulnerability, tectonic plate formation and the presence of geological faults, the Tipaimukh Dam is technically and financially not viable. In this scenario, pursuing a project blindly would be not only sheer waste of public money but also a
    potential seismic bomb for the region,
    writes Arshad H Abbasi

    The earthquake that rocked north-eastern India on September 22, which measured 6.3 on the Richter scale and was of a reasonably long duration, was the fifth in the past 40 days. Located in the foothills of the Himalayas, north-eastern India is bracketed in the highest seismic zone of South Asia, where the three Eurasian, Indian, and Myanmar tectonic plates collide in a subduction mechanism. With this unique tectonic setting and coupled with massive geo-tectonic movements recorded during the past several years, geo-scientists have placed this region in the most fragile zone in the seismic map of the continent. North-eastern India has experienced some of the most devastating earthquakes during the past hundred years. Statistics shows that between 1897 and 1952, there were 44 earthquakes that measured 6.5 or more on the Richter scale. Similarly, between 1953 and 1992, the region had 21 earthquakes of similar intensity. Ignoring the geological and seismic vulnerability and recent warning of the rapid melting of the Himalayas, India is going for a 162.8-metre high dam on the river Barak of north-eastern India, with a storage capacity of 15,900 million cubic metres.
    Besides this seismic vulnerability with its hidden dangers of a massive dam break, it has also sparked another serious controversy on water sharing between India and Bangladesh in relation to the Farakka Barrage conflict. India is taking advantages of its regional hegemony and geo-position as upper riparian, causing colossal damage to the Bangladeshi agro-economy by unilateral and disproportionate diversion of the Ganges water by the barrage. The case of the Tipaimukh dam is, however, different from the Farakka Barrage, as it would have a huge storage reservoir.
    The geological constraints of the dam site have been reported by Dr Soibam Ibotombi of the Department of Earth Sciences at the University of Manipur, India. According to the report, the tectonic features of the dam site have developed geological faults and fractures that might undergo strike-slip and extensional movements if loaded with the weight of the dam alone. Therefore, these geological faults could be further displaced with accelerated rate by any moderate and large earthquakes and if the dam axis is displaced by a few centimetres a massive disaster leading to huge loss of lives and property in downstream areas could occur.
    Putting all seismic and geological constraint aside, no heed is being paid to the protest of local communities and lower riparian Bangladesh and completely ignoring the UN convention on international watercourses. The enormous weight, about 15.9 billion tonnes of water, would bear on the substrata of the dam site could not have been taken into consideration, as scientists today have identified more than 100 cases of earthquakes triggered by reservoirs.
    The most serious precedence of dam or reservoir-induced seismicity is the 7.9-magnitude Sichuan earthquake in May 2008, linked to the construction of the Zipingpu Dam. The case of Sichuan earthquake was presented at the American Geophysical Union and, findings also published in the Chinese Geology and Seismology Journal. The devastating earthquake killed 68,000 people and left about 11 million people homeless. China is spending $146.5 billion to rebuild areas ravaged by the earthquake. In a recent study, it was found that the Zipingpu Dam project was the cause of this devastation. Earthquakes were very unusual for the area as no previous seismic activities were ever recorded.
    The Indian authorities ought to remember that triggered by an earthquake of 6.3 magnitude caused because of the filling of a dam flattened the village of Koynanagar in Maharashtra, western India, on December 11, 1967, killing around 180 people, injuring 1,500 and rendering thousands homeless. The dam was seriously damaged and power cut off to Bombay, causing panic among its populace, who felt the quake 230 kilometres from its epicentre. The epicentre of the tremor and numerous fore and aftershocks were all either near the Koyna Dam or under its reservoir.
    At a seminar on ‘water dispute in South Asia’, held in Dhaka on August 18-19, in which the water resources secretary of the Bangladesh government disclosed that the Tipaimukh dam was conceived in 1955 but the then erstwhile Pakistani government never agreed to its construction. But, immediately after the independence of Bangladesh, the Indian prime minister rushed to Dhaka to set the Indo-Bangladesh Joint Rivers Commission and in the very first meeting of the commission, India informed Bangladesh of the Tipaimukh project. And, since the same meeting Bangladesh continuously has been asking India for data on the Tipaimukh Dam project. However, the Indian authorities did not share any study report or design on the dam. This attitude of India shows that there is no technical or scientific study detail behind the theoretically redundant project to share with all stakeholders except agenda to impose its hegemony over South Asia
    The height of the Zipingpu dam is 150 metres and total weight of filled water was 1.12 billion tonnes, thirteen times less than the proposed capacity of the Tipaimukh Dam. Above all, its sub-geological features were more stable than those of the Tipaimukh dam site. In the light of findings of Sichuan earthquake, seismic vulnerability, tectonic plate formation and the presence of geological faults, the Tipaimukh Dam is technically and financially not viable. In this scenario, pursuing a project blindly would be not only sheer waste of public money but also a potential seismic bomb for the region. The objective of a dam which is to control floods and provide hydroelectric power generation could also be achieved by adopting alternative methods.
    There is no doubt that frequency and intensity of floods are on the rise in the region but its root cause is massive deforestation, compounded with rapid population growth and uncontrolled development in Brahmaputra Basin. Because of increased warming of the Himalayas, the solution to floods in the Basin lie in integrated watershed management. This would necessitate immediate afforestation to increase vegetative cover and coupled with rainwater harvesting techniques it could achieve the same objective with less investment and above all without disturbing the ecology of a fragile and fractured region. Similarly, hydro electric power could be generated by run-of-river option requiring minimal water pondage. Indian authorities need to shelve Tipaimukh dam project immediately to avert the lurking danger of a massive earthquake in the region.
    Arshad H Abbasi is a visiting research fellow at the SDPI-Islamabad and conducted research on earthquake 2005 with collaboration of the University of Zurich Switzerland-Southern. ahabasi@gmail.com

    Comment by Tapan Chy | October 11, 2009 | Reply


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