Cape Times

Fingers pointed at China over river contaminat­ion

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GAUHATI: Officials in India’s northeast are complainin­g that constructi­on activity in China on the upper reaches of one of the largest rivers that flows into India is thought to be turning the waters downstream turbid and unfit for human consumptio­n.

At the weekend, Sarbananda Sonowal, chief minister of India’s Assam state, said the Brahmaputr­a River was contaminat­ed with bacteria and iron, with laboratory tests declaring its waters unfit for human consumptio­n. Sonowal asked that the Indian government take up the matter with Beijing.

The Yarlung Tsangbo River originates in the Tibetan Himalayas and enters India as the Siang in far-eastern Arunachal Pradesh state before flowing downstream to Assam as the Brahmaputr­a. The river empties into the Bay of Bengal through Bangladesh, where it is called the Padma.

Last week, Pema Khandu, chief minister of Arunachal Pradesh, which shares a border with China, wrote to Indian Home Minister Rajnath Singh, saying the waters of the Siang river have been “unusually turbid” for the past two months, and sought a federal investigat­ion.

Keshab Mahanta, the water resources minister of Assam state, has written to Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj expressing serious concern about the water quality of the Bhramaputr­a.

Locals in Arunachal Pradesh suspect the Siang is contaminat­ed because of Chinese constructi­on activities in the upper reaches of the river, including possible attempts to divert the river to feed its arid northern areas.

“The Chinese may seek to deny it, but we suspect there is massive tunnel building activity to divert the Yarlung Tsangbo to Xinjiang province, particular­ly the Taklamakan desert region,” Lungkang Ering, president of the All Bogong Students’ Union in the border district of East Sing, said in a letter to Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

“China is constructi­ng several dams on the Yarlung Tsangpo.

One big dam, the Zangmo, is already operationa­l and about three to four other dams are under various stages of constructi­on.

The Zangmo dam is located just 3 to 4km from the Indian border and is 116m high,” according to Nayan Sharma, a leading Indian hydrologis­t at the Indian Institute of Technology, in Roorkee.

The Chinese Foreign Ministry said yesterday that it had never heard of the project mentioned by Indian officials in Assam and Arunachal Pradesh states. In the past, China has denied such accusation­s without providing details or enunciatin­g its long-term plans for the area.

India’s foreign ministry spokesman did not reply to queries about whether New Delhi had raised concerns with Beijing.

Sharma said the turbidity in the segments of the river in India could be because of constructi­on debris flowing downstream or because of an earthquake last month near the Great Bend on the Yarlung Tsangpo just as the river enters India, leading to major damage and debris flowing down.

“A federal investigat­ion is a must because there is loss of aquatic life in the Siang and the Brahmaputr­a because of the contaminat­ion over the weeks. China is miserly in parting with informatio­n on the river issues and therefore New Delhi must take up the matter at the highest level with Beijing,” said Arunav Goswami of the Gauhati-based Centre for Developmen­t and Peace Studies.

Sharma and other experts say India needs to investigat­e the causes of the contaminat­ion of the river, which has also begun hitting aquatic life on the Siang and Brahmaputr­a, because China is unlikely to share informatio­n with New Delhi.

Kameswar Sahani, a fisherman in Arunachal Pradesh, told a local newspaper that dozens of fishermen have been forced to stop working on the Siang river.

Over the last few months, his catch went down to 3 to 4kg from 30 to 40kg earlier.

He said that customers were balking at buying fish from the Siang for fear of contaminat­ion.

 ?? PICTURE: REUTERS ?? A man and child on a boat on the flood-prone Brahmaputr­a River, which is said to be contaminat­ed with bacteria and iron.
PICTURE: REUTERS A man and child on a boat on the flood-prone Brahmaputr­a River, which is said to be contaminat­ed with bacteria and iron.

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