The Personal Website Of  SP Singh
 

 

 A Window To Perceptive Journalism

 

 

 
 

Akalis were yet to find the loophole in Section 5 but The Indian Express beat the opposition to it as it brought out the new situation: the new Act actually provided legislative sanction to continuing flow of water to neighbouring states which was earlier only by sufferance.

 
 
     

 

 

 

sp singh


home

columns

spice of politics
people
this land of ours

ballot field

across radcliffe

punjab's religio-politics

cinema~books~life

archives

three lines at a time

 

 

 

 

 

 

"Newspapers always excite curiosity. No one ever lays one down without a feeling of disappointment."
Charles Lamb, 1833


"Frankly, despite my horror of the press, I’d love to rise from the grave every ten years or so and go buy a few newspapers."
Luis Buñuel,
Spanish filmmaker



"I often wonder what future historians will say about us. One sentence will suffice to describe modern man: he fornicated and he read newspapers."
Albert Camus,
French novelist, dramatist, philosopher, 1956

Experts say Punjab Act dilutes riparian concept

S P Singh

Chandigarh: 

IRONICALLY for Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh, projected across the nation as the villain of the piece but as the toast of his own state, several staunch advocates of the riparian principal have started accusing his government of diluting the concept so sacrosanct for Punjab. And this within hours of the passage of the SYL canal blocking bill. 

Experts who spoke to this correspondent as well as some senior government officials claimed the Punjab Termination of Agreements Act 2004, by providing the legislature's protection to the existing flow of waters to Rajasthan and Haryana, has diluted the riparian principal. As per the principal, the state of Punjab has sole rights over the waters of rivers flowing exclusively through its territory. 

A well-known expert on the river waters dispute Pritam Singh Kumedan, said Clause 5 of the Act, which protects existing usage could have been avoided as the same Act anyway stated that "even though the states of Haryana and Rajasthan are neither riparian nor basin states they have continued to utilize the waters of rivers Ravi and Beas …the State of Punjab as a good neighbour accepted such utilizations as usage ‘by sufferance', but not as a matter of any recognition of their rights."  

"This was enough to enable Punjab to continue the flow of waters to the two states," said former Chief Engineer and river waters expert G.S. Dhillon. Clause 5 states that "(A)ll existing and actual utilizations through the existing systems shall remain protected and unaffected" notwithstanding the termination of discharge of obligation clauses. Kumedan, while maintaining that Clause 5 "does dilute the sacrosanct riparian principle," said perhaps Amarinder knew well that he would need to quote such an exclusive provision protecting existing usage to stem the storm that followed. 

"With benefit of hindsight, perhaps the government has done well, though I must say I did have my reservations on this score initially when I sat in the Assembly as a guest listening to the debate," he said, but added the Assembly was in any case empowered to amend the Act anytime.  

Advocate General Harbhagwan Singh, when asked about this clause immediately after the passage of the Act, had said it may receive a fresh look later. But Harcharan Bains, who has keenly participated for years in the SYL debate and has been an advisor to Akali Dal president Parkash Singh Badal during the latter's Chief Ministership, said the riparian principal remained unaffected.  

"Clause 5 is here thanks to the legislature's will. The legislature is also empowered to withdraw its will any time. At all times, the legislature subsumes absolute rights of Punjab to control the waters of the state. There is no damage done to the riparian principal," he said.

PR blitz ahead

Amarinder Singh returned from the national capital on Thursday and will address a press conference tomorrow, keeping pace with efforts by his PR men to unleash an advertisement blitzkrieg in national dailies defending the Termination Act. Massive ads were being designed by the PR department for nationwide release. Amarinder himself spent considerable time mingling with MPs in the Central Hall of the Parliament during the day, explaining the Act's intent when he was not busy in studio recordings with sundry channels. A strategy meeting is planned tomorrow, and an Editors' conference is also on the drawing board.
 

July 15, 2004


Also See:

Govt plans legislation to escape SYL
Govt mulled tweaking 131-yr-old Act for SYL 
CM to meet Sorabjee today 
Punjab annuls all Ravi-Beas pacts...
My days numbered, said CM 
SYL: Centre’s eyes were wide shut 
How CM’s Team Legal found an enabling loophole 
Capt plays to the gallery, works the back-channels
Capt finds solace in Narmada Tribunal’s report
State suggested Presidential Reference
‘Presidential Reference is good news’
Capt changes tune
Amarinder demanded this in '87

Print this article

 

 

 
 


Popular Representation

When an unscrupulous industrialist was nominated for a cabinet post one day, one of Calvin Coolidge's political colleagues vehemently objected. "But Mr. President," the man complained, "he's a son of a bitch!" "Well," Coolidge calmly replied, "don't you think they ought to be represented too?"

(Source: Paul Boller, Presidential Anecdotes)

 

Journalistic Peril

In recognition of his dedication to the Journal, William Randolph Hearst once offered columnist Arthur Brisbane a six-month vacation on full pay. When Brisbane declined to accept, Hearst understandably asked him why.

Brisbane provided two good reasons: "The first is that if I quit writing for six months it might damage the circulation of your newspapers," he explained. "The second reason is that it might not!"

(Source: R. Marquard, Jokes and Anecdotes for All Occasions)

 
 
 

 

 

SP Singh's Blog  

 

 

 



 


Grapevine

 
   
 

Contact me

 


spsingh@penmarks.com



 

 
 

SP Singh's
Fav Newspaper Reads

 
 


People everywhere confuse what they read in newspapers with news. But, if words were invented to conceal thought, newspapers are a great improvement of a bad invention.  Click on any below to find out:


New York Times
The Washington Post
The Guardian

The Telegraph

Beirut Daily Star
Boston Globe
Moscow Times
The New Yorker
Al-Ahram Weekly
Arab News
Dawn
Al Jazeera
The Hindu
The Indian Express
The Asian Age
The Tribune

 
     
 

SP Singh's Fav Blogs

 


The Corner
The Free West
Political Animal
Three Quarks
Sounds and Fury
The Reading Experience
Counter Punch
Exquisite Corpse

 

 

     
Home     Latest Column     SP Singh's Columns     Spice Of Politics     People     This Land Of Ours     Ballot Field     Across Radcliffe     Punjab's Religio-Politics

     
Cinema~Books~Life    
Three Lines At A Time     Guest Column     Glossary     Archives     Grapevine    SP Singh     Contact     Search     Site Index     Site Map     Feedback 


      © 2006       All rights reserved        Site design by Big Ideas