Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Will continue to share river water data with India: China

RIVER WATER RECEDING

- Sutirtho Patranobis letters@hindustant­imes.com

: Beijing said on Friday it will continue to cooperate with New Delhi on sharing river water data as two north-eastern states braced for an increase in the level of the Yarlung Tsangpo river following heavy rainfall in southern China.

In a statement emailed to Hindustan Times, China’s foreign ministry said it had alerted Indian authoritie­s about the increase in water volume in the middle reaches of the Yarlung Tsangpo and advised them to prepare for an impact downstream.

The Yarlung Tsangpo is called Siang when it enters Arunachal Pradesh and becomes the Brahmaputr­a in Assam after combining with two more rivers downstream.

The Chinese foreign ministry didn’t respond to a question on whether constructi­on activities or landslides had impacted the water flow.

“Chinese water conservanc­y department has informed India about the situation and reminded

: With improvemen­t in weather on Saturday, the water level in Siang river in Arunachal Pradesh has started receding, officials said. East Siang deputy commission­er Tamiyo Tatak said that the water in Siang river at Pasighat, the district headquarte­rs, is normal although there were high tides. “The water level of the river receded since last evening with improvemen­t in weather,” he said. Official sources from Tuting in Upper Siang said that the water level is receding. PTI

the latter to pay attention and prepare for it,” the Chinese ministry said in its statement. “China will maintain communicat­ion and cooperatio­n with India with the best wishes and humanitari­an spirit of developing Sino-Indian relations.”

In 2017, China stopped sharing hydrologic­al data with India at the time of the 73-day standoff between Indian and Chinese troops at Doklam near the Sikkim border.

Beijing had then said it was unable to share data on the Yarlung Tsangpo as data collection centres in the Tibet Autonomous Region (TAR) were being upgraded. The foreign ministry said the two countries had cooperated in the past on data related to trans-border rivers.

“For a long time, China and India have carried out a series of good cooperatio­n in the areas of hydrologic­al reporting, flood prevention and mitigation, and emergency response handling under the cross-border river expert mechanism,” the statement said.

In March, the issue of sharing water data was resolved during the 11th meeting of the IndiaChina expert-level mechanism on trans-border rivers. India and China signed an MoU on the margins of the Shanghai Cooperatio­n Organisati­on (SCO) Summit in June that enabled the Chinese side to provide hydrologic­al data during the flood season from May 15 to October 15 every year.

BEIJING ITANAGAR

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