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"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

State suggested Presidential Reference

S P Singh

Chandigarh

IF Presidential Reference is the Centre's magic wand to resolve the contentious construction and waters issue, then the Punjab Government could possibly get the credit for telling the magician how to do it, something any magician is loathe to admit. 

In the matrix of partisan politics mixed with the emotive waters issue, the Central Government's likely move to go in for a Presidential Reference on the situation created by the passage of the Punjab Termination of Agreements Bill 2004 is being seen by top state government's mandarins as a relief.  

"This is exactly what we wanted," said a senior official connected with the Irrigation Department. Top officials not only confirmed that the Amarinder government was more than happy with the way things were shaping up, but even said the entire exercise went off exactly as scripted by Punjab's officials and the state's Team Legal.  

"The Punjab Government had itself suggested in its communication to the Union Ministry of Water Resources on July 15 that the situation arising in the aftermath of the SYL canal-blocking Bill passed by the State Assembly now preferably requires a Presidential Reference," revealed an official. 

So much so, revealed sources, the state government’s communication even made a mention of Article 143 of the Constitution under which such a reference is made.  

As per Article 143, "If at any time it appears to the President that a question of law or fact has arisen, or is likely to arise, which is of such a nature and of such public importance that it is expedient to obtain the opinion of the Supreme Court on it, he may refer the question to the Court for consideration and the Court may, after hearing as it thinks fit, report to the President its opinion thereon." 

Punjab officials said if Presidential Reference was indeed made, it would result in the setting up of a Constitutional Bench of five or more Supreme Court judges and would give Punjab an opportunity to place its case in a holistic manner.

"Punjab has never had the opportunity to get an assessment and allocation of river waters done through application of judicial processes. It has always either been a notification, as in 1976, or a pact, as in 1981. Now the state may finally be able to press for the case that the entire quantum of water is assessed de novo as per now available latest flow series," said an official.

While CM Amarinder Singh would prefer not to go to town claiming victory, the Presidential Reference route leaves enough escape routes for Haryana and Rajasthan, who can always make face-saving statements of bowing to the highest court. 

Since the UPA would be taking the same route which the NDA took in the Cauvery dispute, it will suffer lesser barbs in Parliament. 

July 20, 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 
Experts say Punjab Act dilutes riparian concept 
Capt plays to the gallery, works the back-channels
Capt finds solace in Narmada Tribunal's report
‘Presidential Reference is good news’
Capt changes tune
Amarinder demanded this in '87

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Sheila Oopps

Canadian Liberal MP Sheila Copps first sought public office (in Hamilton, Ontario) during the federal election of 1976. Her knowledge of languages enabled Copps to speak passable Italian - and patchy Polish and Hungarian - at various ethnic functions. Then, while preparing to attend a Croatian dance, Copps memorized a Croatian greeting ('Dobar dan Hrvati') which she was told meant 'Good afternoon, people.' Her audience was delighted.

The following day, Copps attended a Serbian picnic. Because Serbs and Croats - though divided by a long history of bitter animosity - share the same language, Copps trotted out the same expression once again - and was nearly lynched:

"The potential voters visibly recoiled in horror," she later recalled. "My Serbian hosts were quick to hustle me off the stage and try to make amends. I didn't really understand their language, they explained. Later, a husky young Serbian man approached me and said I should thank my stars that I was a woman. Otherwise, I would have been taken out in the alley and assaulted." The problem? 'Dobar dan Hrvati' does not mean 'Good afternoon, people'; it means: 'Good afternoon, Croatian people'!

Six hundred eligible voters attended the Serbian picnic; Copps lost the election by sixteen votes.

(Source: Douglas Fetherling, Broadview Book of Canadian Anecdotes)

 
 
 

 

 

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