NY Times July 20, 2010
Water Dispute Increases India-Pakistan Tension
By LYDIA POLGREEN and SABRINA TAVERNISE

BANDIPORE, Kashmir — In this high Himalayan valley on the 
Indian-controlled side of Kashmir, the latest battle line between 
India and Pakistan has been drawn.

This time it is not the ground underfoot, which has been disputed 
since the bloody partition of British India in 1947, but the water 
hurtling from mountain glaciers to parched farmers’ fields in 
Pakistan’s agricultural heartland.

Indian workers here are racing to build an expensive hydroelectric 
dam in a remote valley near here, one of several India plans to 
build over the next decade to feed its rapidly growing but 
power-starved economy.

In Pakistan, the project raises fears that India, its archrival 
and the upriver nation, would have the power to manipulate the 
water flowing to its agriculture industry — a quarter of its 
economy and employer of half its population. In May it filed a 
case with the international arbitration court to stop it.

Water has become a growing source of tension in many parts of the 
world between nations striving for growth. Several African 
countries are arguing over water rights to the Nile. Israel and 
Jordan have competing claims to the Jordan River. Across the 
Himalayas, China’s own dam projects have piqued India, a rival for 
regional, and even global, power.

But the fight here is adding a new layer of volatility at a 
critical moment to one of the most fraught relationships anywhere, 
one between deeply distrustful, nuclear-armed nations who have 
already fought three wars.

The dispute threatens to upset delicate negotiations to renew 
peace talks, on hold since Pakistani militants killed at least 163 
people in attacks in Mumbai, India, in November 2008. The United 
States has been particularly keen to ease tensions so that 
Pakistan can divert troops and matériel from its border with India 
to its frontier with Afghanistan to fight Taliban insurgents.

Anti-India nationalists and militant networks in Pakistan, already 
dangerously potent, have seized on the issue as a new source of 
rage to perpetuate 60 years of antagonism.

Jamaat-u-Dawa, the charity wing of Lashkar-e-Taiba, the militant 
group behind the Mumbai attacks, has retooled its public relations 
effort around the water dispute, where it was once focused almost 
entirely on land claims to Kashmir. Hafiz Saeed, Jamaat’s leader, 
now uses the dispute in his Friday sermons to whip up fresh hatreds.

With their populations rapidly expanding, water is critical to 
both nations. Pakistan contains the world’s largest contiguous 
irrigation system, water experts say. It has also become an 
increasingly fertile recruiting ground for militant groups, who 
play on a lack of opportunity and abundant anti-India sentiment. 
The rivers that traverse Punjab, Pakistan’s most populous province 
and the heart of its agriculture industry, are the country’s 
lifeline, and the dispute over their use goes to the heart of its 
fears about its larger, stronger neighbor.

For India, the hydroprojects are vital to harnessing Himalayan 
water to fill in the serious energy shortfalls that crimp its 
economy. About 40 percent of India’s population is off the power 
grid, and lack of electricity has hampered industry. The 
Kishenganga project is a crucial part of India’s plans to close 
that gap.

The Indian project has been on the drawing board for decades, and 
it falls under a 50-year-old treaty that divides the Indus River 
and its tributaries between both countries. “The treaty worked 
well in the past, mostly because the Indians weren’t building 
anything,” said John Briscoe, an expert on South Asia’s water 
issues at Harvard University. “This is a completely different 
ballgame. Now there’s a whole battery of these hydroprojects.”

The treaty, the result of a decade of painstaking negotiation that 
ended in 1960, gave Pakistan 80 percent of the waters in the Indus 
River system, a ratio that nationalists in Pakistan often forget. 
India, the upriver nation, is permitted to use some of the water 
for farming, drinking and power generation, as long as it does not 
store too much.

While the Kishenganga dam is allowed under the treaty, the dispute 
is over how it should be built and the timely release of water. 
Pakistan contends that having the drainage at the very base of the 
dam will allow India to manipulate the water flow when it wants, 
for example, during a crucial period of a planting season.

“It makes Pakistan very vulnerable,” said a lawyer who has worked 
on past water cases for Pakistan. “You can’t just tell us, ‘Hey, 
you should trust us.’ We don’t. That’s why we have a treaty.”

India has rejected any suggestion that it has violated the treaty 
or tried to steal water. In a speech on June 13, India’s foreign 
secretary, Nirupama Rao, called such allegations “breast-beating 
propaganda,” adding “the myth of water theft does not stand the 
test of rational scrutiny or reason.”

Water experts concur, but say Pakistan does have a legitimate 
cause for concern. The real issue is timing. If India chooses to 
fill its dams at a crucial time for Pakistan, it has the potential 
to ruin a crop. Mr. Briscoe estimates that if India builds all its 
planned projects, it could have the capacity of holding up about a 
month’s worth of river flow during Pakistan’s critical dry season, 
enough to wreck an entire planting season.

Here in Bandipore, where engineers and laborers work long shifts 
to build the powerhouse and tunnel for the long-awaited dam, the 
work is not merely a matter of electricity. National pride is at 
stake, they said.

“This dam is a matter of our national prestige,” one of the 
engineers on the project said. “It is our right to build this dam, 
and our future depends on it.”

Pakistanis say they have reason to be worried. In 1948, a year 
after Pakistan and India were established as states, an 
administrator in India shut off the water supply to a number of 
canals in Pakistani Punjab. Indian authorities later said it was a 
bureaucratic mix-up, but in Pakistan, the memory lingers.

“Once you’ve had a gun put to your head and it’s been cocked, you 
don’t forget it,” said the Pakistani lawyer, who asked that his 
name not be used because he was not part of the current legal team.

A genuine water shortage in Pakistan, and the country’s inability 
to store large quantities of water, has only made matters worse, 
exposing it to any small variation in rainfall or river flow. 
Pakistan is about to slip into a category of country the United 
Nations defines as “water scarce.”

“They are confronting a very serious water issue,” said a senior 
American official in Islamabad. “There’s a high amount of anxiety, 
and it’s not misplaced.”

The design of the dam requires that much of the water in the 
Kishenganga River be diverted for much of the year. That will kill 
off fish and harm the livelihoods of the people living in the 
Pakistan-administered side of Kashmir, Pakistani officials say.

Kaiser Bengali, an economist, argues that Pakistan’s water crisis 
has little to do with India, and says that the real way to ease it 
is to introduce water conservation methods and modern farming 
techniques. In a country where summer temperatures reach 120 
degrees, as much as 40 percent of Pakistan’s water is lost before 
even reaching the roots of the plants, experts say.

The water dispute would not be nearly as acute, experts said, if 
India and Pakistan talked and shared data on water. Instead, the 
distrust and antagonism is such that bureaucrats have hoarded 
information, and are secretly gunning to finish projects on either 
side of the line of control in order to be the first to have an 
established fact on the ground.

“It’s like a bad marriage in which we have proscribed roles,” the 
Pakistani lawyer said. “Would it be better if we were 
communicating openly? Yes. But in the present circumstances we are 
not.”

Hari Kumar contributed reporting from New Delhi.
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