Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Quake behind muddying of Brahmaputr­a: China

- Sutirtho Patranobis spatranobi­s@htlive.com n

BEIJING: China on Wednesday said an earthquake in the Tibet Autonomous Region could have caused “turbidity” or muddiness in the waters in the lower reaches of Yarlung Zangbo river, which flows as the Siang and then the Brahmaputr­a into India.

The foreign ministry, in a statement to HT, dismissed reports that said the muddying of the waters of the Siang, which enters India in Arunachal Pradesh, was caused by infrastruc­ture projects built by China.

The ministry said its statement was being issued on “humanitari­an” grounds.

Experts in India had earlier hinted that the sudden muddying of the river could be a deliberate ploy by China to prove a point against the backdrop of tense bilateral relations following the military standoff at Doklam.

“We have noted that Indian media recently made a series of reports on this issue. They said China was conducting water conservanc­y project or exploiting a mine previously ,whereas now (they) claim there is a barrier lake upstream,” said the statement from the foreign ministry spokespers­on’s office.

The statement referred to an earthquake in the region in November as the reason behind the turbidity in the river.

“In mid-November this year, a 6.9-magnitude earthquake hit the area near Mainling County in Tibet, which might lead to the turbidity in the middle and lower reaches of the river for a certain period of time,” it said.

The statement further said: “After the earthquake, we monitored the water quality of the Yarlung Zangbo River and the results showed that it met the standards of Class III water.”

In China, the Class III standard for water denotes fairly clean quality.

The foreign ministry also qualified its statement with regard to the dragging border dispute — Beijing claims Arunachal Pradesh as part of “South Tibet”.

“I would like to stress that the above-mentioned investigat­ion is utterly for humanitari­an considerat­ions and does not affect China’s stance on the border issue,” it said.

On Tuesday, the foreign ministry said it would “maintain communicat­ion” with India on crossborde­r rivers to deal with massive lakes formed by landslides on the Yarlung Zangbo river.

Reports said three lakes had been formed by landslides following the earthquake in the eastern section of the China-India border.

The lakes were “caused by natural factors“and were not the outcome of a “man-made accident”, spokespers­on Hua Chunying said.

 ?? AP FILE ?? n Women wash clothes in the Brahmaputr­a in Guwahati.
AP FILE n Women wash clothes in the Brahmaputr­a in Guwahati.

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