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When the Supreme Court on Friday, 16 February, stated categorically that a river is a national resource and does not belong to any one state, it gladdened the hearts of many activists in the lower riparian state of Tamil Nadu. In Thanjavur, PR Pandyan, President of the Tamil Nadu Farmers Committee said this means Karnataka can no longer behave like it owns the Cauvery river, and act as if it were doing a favour by releasing its water downstream into Tamil Nadu, Kerala and Puducherry.
Follow the live updates on the Cauvery water dispute verdict here.
A jubilant Pandyan tells The Quint:
This academic assertion by the court served to cover up for the disappointment over the reduction in its share of water – from 192 TMC ft to 177.25 TMC ft, when it was in fact hoping for an upward revision. Another farmer leader P Ayyakannu, who led the farmers’ protest in New Delhi last year, also preferred to see the glass half full. He is pinning his hopes on the formation of the Cauvery Management Board, that will decide on a monthly basis the amount of water that has flowed out of Karnataka.
“It is shocking that the water quantity allocated to Tamil Nadu has been reduced. But the Board hopefully will ensure that we get at least that quantity of water,” says Ayyakannu. Going by past experience of Karnataka's reticence to release water, farmers want the Centre to constitute the Board within 24 hours.
Across the border, there is jubilation. Karnataka which had asked for an extra 39 TMC ft of water over and above the 270 TMC ft that was given by the Cauvery Water Disputes Tribunal in 2007 is happy it got at least 14.75 TMC ft water extra. Unlike Tamil Nadu that sees the reduction in the amount of water allocated to it as a setback, Karnataka sees this as the correction of a historical anomaly.
Environmentalist V Balasubramanian, who also served as Additional Chief Secretary of Karnataka, points out:
In the euphoria over the verdict, which is seen to be favouring it, Karnataka is not talking much about the constitution of the Board. The state, under successive governments, has always opposed the formation of an independent authority that will keep a close watch on the release of Cauvery water every month and direct or reprimand Karnataka if it fails to abide by what is ordered.
This is because Karnataka feels that it will be forced to release water even when there is a drought-like situation in the state. Karnataka government officials point out that what goes unnoticed is that the state is second only to Rajasthan in terms of being the most arid state in India. So they want the release of water to be under the control of its irrigation department.
There is a political reason to this as well. While Karnataka has in recent years been ruled by either the Congress or the BJP, in Tamil Nadu power alternates between one of the two Dravidian parties. The ruling party in Chennai has often shown a tendency to align itself with the party in power in New Delhi. This clout, Karnataka fears, could be used to get a Cauvery Management Board to do Tamil Nadu's bidding.
The court has said that an authority has to be constituted within six weeks. With elections in Karnataka due in May, it remains to be seen how the constitution of a Board by the Centre will be received as that would be seen as jeopardising the BJP's political interests in a state where it hopes to come to power.
In an atmosphere of polarised politics and divisive regionalism, any move to set up a Board by the BJP government will be criticised as anti-Kannadiga. It will be up to the court once again to ensure that the deadline is met.
(The writer is a senior journalist. He can be reached at @Iamtssudhir. This is an opinion piece and the views expressed above are the author’s own.The Quint neither endorses nor is responsible for the same.)
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