Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

‘Pak to raise India’s Indus Waters Treaty violation with WB’

- Press Trust of India letters@hindustant­imes.com

will raise the issue of India’s alleged violation of the Indus Waters Treaty of 1960 with the World Bank, a media report said on Sunday, a day after Prime Minister Narendra Modi inaugurate­d the 330 MW Kishengang­a hydroelect­ric project in Jammu and Kashmir.

Pakistan’s ambassador to the US, Aizaz Ahmed Chaudhry, told media that a four-member delegation led by Attorney General of Pakistan (AGP) Ashtar Ausaf Ali is in Washington to hold talks with the president of World Bank, Radio Pakistan reported.

He said that the issue of constructi­on of the Kishangang­a Dam will be discussed in the meeting. Modi inaugurate­d the Kishangang­a hydroelect­ric power plant on Saturday, amid protests from Pakistan which claims that the project on a river flowing into its country will disrupt water supplies.

Pakistan’s Foreign Office on Friday voiced concerns over the project, saying inaugurati­on without resolution of dispute between the two countries will tantamount to violation of the treaty that regulates the use of waters in the shared rivers.

Islamabad had been raising objections over the design of the hydel project, saying it is not in line with the criteria laid down under the treaty. But, India says the project design was well within parameters of the treaty.

The project, located at Bandipore in North Kashmir, envisages diversion of water of Kishen Ganga river to undergroun­d power house through a 23.25-kmlong head race tunnel to generate 1713 million units per annum.

The Kishengang­a project was started in 2007 but on May 17, 2010, Pakistan moved for internatio­nal arbitratio­n against India under the provisions of the Indus Waters Treaty.

The Hague-based Internatio­nal Court of Arbitratio­n allowed India in 2013 to go ahead with the constructi­on in North Kashmir, and upheld India’s right under the bilateral treaty to divert waters from the Kishengang­a for power generation in Jammu and Kashmir. The court, however, decided that India shall release a minimum flow of nine cubic metres per second into the Kishengang­a river (known as Neelam in Pakistan) at all times to maintain environmen­tal flows.

Pakistan is working on a 969MW Neelum-Jhelum hydroelect­ric project downstream.

ISLAMABAD:Pakistan

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