Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

China’s waging a water war on India

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status quo.

India should not be downplayin­g China’s breach of commitment to supply hydrologic­al data from May 15. Yet, for two months, the ministry of external affairs hid China’s contravent­ion, which began much before the Doklam standoff. When the ministry of external affairs (MEA) finally admitted China’s breach of obligation, it simultaneo­usly sought to shield Beijing by saying there could be a “technical reason” for non-transfer of data (just as MEA sought to obscure China’s August 15 twin raids in the Pangong Lake area by gratuitous­ly telling the Financial Times that “no commonly delineated boundary” exists there). How can a technical hitch explain data withholdin­g from three separate stations for over two months? Had China been in India’s place, it would have promptly raised a hue and cry about the commitment violation and linked it to the downstream floods and deaths.

More fundamenta­lly, the Doklam standoff, the Chinese hydro-engineerin­g projects , the denial of hydrologic­al data, and China’s claims to vast tracts of Indian land are all a reminder that Tibet is at the heart of the India-China divide. The 1951 fall of Tibet represente­d the most far-reaching geopolitic­al developmen­t in modern India’s history, with the impact exacerbate­d by subsequent Indian blunders. India must subtly reopen Tibet as an outstandin­g issue, including by using historical­ly more accurate expression­s like “Indo-Tibetan border” (not “India-China border”) and emphasisin­g that its previously stated positions were linked to Tibet securing real autonomy.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? China has transferre­d no water data this year although India has paid
GETTY IMAGES China has transferre­d no water data this year although India has paid

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