ater,
it is said, could well be the main cause of a World War III flare up.
Such is the intensity and bitterness with which the sharing and
distribution of the natural resource is fought across internal and
international boundaries.
John Wood, Professor Emeritus,
Department of Political Science, University of British Columbia,
Vancouver, Canada, has been studying the disputes over the Narmada Dam
since 1989.
Under the Shastri Indo-Canadian
fellowship, the author has travelled several times to India and studied
the wide-ranging issues raised over water resource development.
This book, he dedicates "To the
people of the Narmada River Valley and all the victims and beneficiaries
of its development with the hope that they may find forgiveness,
gratitude and understanding for each other."
The Indian Constitution’s
Seventh Schedule (11:17) provides that "Water that is to say water
supplies, irrigation and canals, drainage and embankments, water storage
and water power" falls under state jurisdiction. However the rider
"subject to the provisions of entry 56 of List 1" is added to enable the
central government to control regulation and development of inter-state
rivers and valleys to the extent that "Parliament by law declares it to
be in the public interest." If Parliament so declares, Article 262 of
the Constitution empowers the central government to provide for the
adjudication of "any dispute or complaint with respect to the use,
distribution or control of the waters of, or in, any inter-state river
or river valley."
A Water Disputes Tribunal is
appointed by the CJI consisting of a sitting Supreme Court judge and two
other judges chosen from the Supreme or High Court. This was to prevent
extensive delays in litigation and it recognized the fact that
allocation of the costs and benefits of developing a river’s water is
ultimately a political decision!
There have been several
disputes over water allocation in India, the most significant ones
being, Damodar Valley Corporation, Krishna and Godaveri disputes,
Cauvery River, Ravi-Beas River and of course the best known of them all,
the Narmada Valley.
The dramatis personae in the
Narmada Valley saga have been four contentious states, Madhya Pradesh,
Rajasthan, Maharashtra and Gujarat.
"The people of Madhya Pradesh
could perhaps be forgiven for thinking that the Narmada was "their"
river since nine-tenths of the flow and the catchment contribution lay
within the state’s territory."
Apart from the trap of
territorial sovereignty that it led to, the dispute soon turned into an
upstream-downstream conflict but it was nowhere parallel to the Cauvery
bitterness where the downstream state became aggrieved because the
upstream state was appropriating water in such a manner as to jeopardize
its economy. Whereas Gujarat was aggrieved that its economy was being
held back because it could not fully exploit the Narmada water, it could
scarcely blame upstream Madhya Pradesh for increased appropriation. On a
theoretical level, the Narmada dispute offered more bargaining room than
the Cauvery dispute. Madhya Pradesh had bigger grievances than
allocation and appropriation of water - it had to do with the height of
the terminal dam, revised several times and the consequent fear of
displacement of its vulnerable populace.
The rest is ongoing newspaper
headlines and history in the making.
The book is essentially an
academic work, well researched and exhaustive in regard to every legal
nuance of the dispute. The emotional drama is told in b/w pictures. With
activists, opportunists and even stars getting into the Narmada fray,
this is one story that is not likely to have an epilogue in the very
near future.