Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

China blackens Brahmaputr­a? Assam sends sample to Hyd lab

- Rahul Karmakar rahul.karmakar@hindustant­imes.com ▪

NEW DELHI: The Assam government has sent samples of water from the Brahmaputr­a to the Hyderabad-based Indian Institute of Chemical Technology amid reports that the river’s water has turned “unusually muddy” and black because of suspected Chinese activities upstream in Tibet.

Samples were collected from several points of the 891km river from Sadiya in eastern Assam to Dhubri in the west bordering Bangladesh, chief minister Sarbananda Sonowal said Saturday.

The Brahmaputr­a is formed after three rivers — Lohit, Dibang and Siang, all flowing through Arunachal Pradesh — meet near Sadiya. The Siang originates in Tibet, where the river is called Yarlung Tsangpo.

Blackened, muddy waters of the Siang triggered conspiracy theories about China constructi­ng a tunnel to divert the water of Yarlung Tsangpo to the parched Xinjiang province.

Beijing denied the reports or

BLACKENED, MUDDY WATERS OF THE SIANG TRIGGERED THEORIES ABOUT CHINA BUILDING A TUNNEL TO DIVERT THE WATER OF YARLUNG TSANGPO TO XINJIANG

any plan to contaminat­e the Siang and Brahmaputr­a. Indian officials attributed the blackening of water of the two rivers to a major earthquake in Tibet.

“The institute in Hyderabad and the Indian Institute of Technology in Guwahati have been asked to test the water samples and find out reasons behind the water turning black. Remedial action will be taken after the reason is ascertaine­d,” he said.

“Government of Arunachal Pradesh and Assam had approached the Centre in this regard. It will take it up with government of China. From our side, we have already tested water in laboratory. Experts say it is contaminat­ed with bacteria and iron and is unfit for human consumptio­n,” Sonowal said.

Ninong Ering, the Congress MP representi­ng Arunachal East, sounded the alarm in November, saying the Siang’s water has turned unusually turbid and is threatenin­g aquatic life. The turbidity, he said, was caused by a cement-like substance possibly flushed down from Tibet.

Ering wrote to Prime Minister Narendra Modi, highlighti­ng the issue.

Days later, the frontier state’s public health engineerin­g department tested samples from near Pasighat town and found the nephelomet­ric turbidity unit (NTU) to be 425, abnormally more than the permissibl­e limit of five.

Assam was late to react, but water resources minister Keshab Mahanta said Siang’s problem flowed into the Brahmaputr­a after tests at three places — two in Dibrugarh and one in Sonitpur districts — revealed an NTU level of 295, 404 and 162 respective­ly.

“We have taken up the matter with the water resources and other central ministries,” Mahanta said.

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