This Article is From Sep 12, 2016

Cauvery Issue: 10-Point Guide To The Conflict And Why It Recurs

Cauvery Issue: 10-Point Guide To The Conflict And Why It Recurs

In Bengaluru and other parts of Karnataka, there have been massive protests over the Cauvery dispute

Bengaluru: The war over the Cauvery river is getting uglier with widespread vandalism and massive protests paralysing parts of Karnataka, especially Bengaluru and Mysuru today. The protests come after the Supreme Court modified its last week's order, asking Karnataka to release less water from the Cauvery to Tamil Nadu but for more days.

Here's your 10-point guide to this story:

  1. The Supreme Court today directed Karnataka to release 12,000 cusecs of water to Tamil Nadu daily till September 20, which is 3,000 less than what the state had been asked to share last week.

  2. Karnataka, in court today, argued that Tamil Nadu's claims of "agony" are false, and that Karnataka had hardly enough water for farming or even drinking after poor rain. The top court refused to make any more changes after Karnataka argued that it would end up giving more water than originally asked to.

  3. Last week, the Supreme Court had ruled that Karnataka must release 15,000 cusecs of water daily for 10 days to Tamil Nadu.

  4. Tamil Nadu says its farmers are in desperate need of the water for the samba or second seasonal crop of the year. Karnataka says Tamil Nadu has already completed one crop cycle, and is now unfairly seeking water for another, whereas its own farmers are struggling.

  5. The Cauvery river, which flows through southern Karnataka and then into Tamil Nadu, has been a point of conflict for decades. Its water was originally divided according to nearly century-old agreements.

  6. Karnataka says it has been given a raw deal. Tamil Nadu says lakhs of acres have come to depend on the water and so its share cannot be reconfigured.

  7. In 1990, the central government created a tribunal to examine the conflict. In 2007, this tribunal delivered its verdict on how water should be shared between Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Puducherry and Kerala. However, the states have challenged the divide.

  8. Karnataka says that this year, there has been not enough rain in key catchment areas for the Cauvery as also in the Kodagu district of Karnataka, where the Cauvery originates.

  9. In Karnataka, there are four dams on the Cauvery. The state government says there isn't enough supply in these dams for the drinking water needs of cities like Bengaluru and Mysuru.

  10. The last time the Supreme Court intervened to order Karnataka to increase the supply of water to Tamil Nadu was four years ago.



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