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🇧🇩 India's Water Terrorism Against Bangladesh (1 Viewer)

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Saif

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Jan 24, 2024
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Sharing of Ganges: Water What looms after 2026?​


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Farakka Barrage.

In 1976, a mass procession led by a nearly 80-year-old peasant leader, Maulana Bhasani, from Dhaka to the Indo-Bangladesh Border drew huge attention from national and international media. It demonstrated a profound sense of deprivation among the people of Bangladesh against the unilateral operation of the Farakka Barrage by India, which allegedly killed the Ganges River and unsettled the lives of millions of Bangladeshis living downstream of the Ganges.

The Farakka issue quickly became a perennial irritant in Indo-Bangladesh relations. An internationally renowned expert, R.R. Baxter, was hired to prepare a document assessing Bangladesh's claims. Based on this assessment, a White Paper was published, and the issue was raised by Bangladesh in the UN General Assembly in 1977. Consequently, a five-year temporary agreement was concluded; however, it soon faltered, followed by a weaker legal arrangement (MoU), which raised more controversy on both sides of the border.

I went to SOAS, University of London in 1994 with a Commonwealth Scholarship to pursue a PhD on the international legal aspects of this conflict. Based on a literature review, I found that there were examples of accommodating competing interests of the basin states of a shared river by observing the principles of international watercourse (or river) law. So, why had Bangladesh and India failed to do so, despite many years of protracted consultation and negotiations?

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The withdrawal of water by India during the dry season results in the almost dried-up riverbed at the Hardinge Bridge. The photo was taken by Humayun Kabir Topu on February 18, 2024.

I tried to find answers to this question. In the absence of any "global codification" by intergovernmental bodies, the search for international law centered on applicable "customary rules." The International Law Commission rapporteur assigned to codify those rules on the utilization of shared rivers into a global convention had already agreed in 1994 on the existence of such customary rules. However, there were other versions as well; a notable one was the 1970s proceedings of the Asian-African Legal Consultative Committee, comprising, among others, India, Pakistan, and later Bangladesh, which recorded its failure to agree on most of the drafts of customary rules placed for its consideration.

It therefore appeared doubtful whether the global customary rules of international watercourse law were "global" at all, or whether they, like some other branches of international law, were based almost entirely on European and American practice. For that reason, was their application in other areas, including in South Asia, still a debatable issue, and did this confusion have any impact on the resolution of the Ganges water dispute?

A closer look at the South Asian practice, however, reveals an encouraging picture. It shows that from an early period, most of the countries in this region recognized at least one applicable international law principle: the principle of equitable sharing or equitable utilization. Occasional references were also made to the principle of no harm, although it has implications that do not fully conform to the equitable principle.

For example, the equitable utilization principle provides for numerous factors of equity such as river condition, existing uses, dependent population, available alternatives, and the impact of the project, which can be used to assess whether the diversion by the Farakka Project was equitable or reasonable. However, this principle has not settled the hierarchy of those factors. Therefore, by selectively emphasizing those factors, arguments both for and against any planned measure such as the Farakka Project could be made.

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On May 16, 1976, Maulana Abdul Hamid Khan Bhasani led a massive long march from Rajshahi towards India’s Farakka Barrage, demanding the demolition of the barrage constructed by the Indian government to divert the flow of Ganges water within its territory.

But in accordance with the no harm principle, it would be very difficult to support such a project considering its harmful impact on the downstream areas.

Interestingly, the relation between these two substantive principles has not been fully resolved even in the global codification of international watercourse law in 1997. The 1997 Watercourse Convention simply suggests resolving disputes based on both these principles and through compliance with a set of procedural obligations such as information sharing, consultation, and negotiation, etc.

However, there have been two important developments in the last few decades which, among other things, aim to place more emphasis on ensuring protection from potential harmful impacts of any planned measures on a shared river, specifically emphasizing the no-harm principle. The first is the emergence of the concept of treating an international watercourse as an indivisible natural resource, thus requiring a basin-wide approach for the utilization, development, and management of an international watercourse. The second is the growing legal recognition of the right of the river as a living entity, and therefore giving due regard to the environmental implications of the utilization of a watercourse. These require a much broader, holistic, and rational approach to dealing with international watercourses and provide wider opportunities for addressing the long-standing conflicts on the utilization of international watercourses.

With added optimism based on these developments, I recently embarked on updating my PhD (awarded in 1999) thesis. As the principles of comprehensive data sharing, integrated water resource management, and protection of the ecology of the watercourse continue to solidify, their importance in the renegotiation of the latest Ganges treaty of 1996, set to expire in 2026, has grown significantly.

The title of the thoroughly updated version of my PhD is "Sharing Ganges Water, Indo-Bangladesh Treaties, and International Law," and it was published (under my academic name Md. Nazrul Islam) in February 2023 by University Press Limited.


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Ganges-Brahmaputra-Meghna basin


This book has compared the experience of negotiation of the Ganges agreements to the contemporary development of international law to determine the extent to which the basin states of the Ganges were prepared to learn from the advances in international law. It has also attempted to understand whether the Ganges dispute reflected non-compliance or a narrow application of international law.

First, it assesses whether the information exchanged between India and Pakistan (predecessor of Bangladesh before the latter's liberation in 1971) during the early stage of the planning of the Farakka project was adequate to resolve the amount of water of the Ganges that constituted an equitable share for each country and the extent of the impact of the project. It should be mentioned that the irrigation and hydroelectric projects of the upper reaches of India and their impact on the availability of water to be shared between the Farakka project and Bangladesh at the downstream area were kept outside the purview of negotiations on the Ganges issue. What were its implications, and how did the international law developed at that time entertain this question?

Second, the later agreements, including the 1996 Ganges Treaty (between Bangladesh and India), were premised on this limited information sharing and made an allocation of the Ganges water at an extreme downstream point between the Farakka project and Bangladesh without provisions for exchanging information on the use of Ganges water in the vast upstream areas in Uttar Pradesh and Bihar in India. It was claimed that these arrangements were based on equity, fairness, and no harm. The crucial question raised in my book is, can the arrangement of sharing the 'residual' flow of a river (water left over after the unlimited upstream diversion) be made equitable or fair? Or ensure no harm to the downstream country? What were the rules of international law on such issues?

Third, in the case of the Ganges, the issue appeared more complex, since the river actually originated further upstream in Nepal. Can Nepal, therefore, be ignored in any sharing arrangement of the Ganges at its downstream point? How would it impact the sharing arrangement then? How different could it have been with the participation of Nepal?

If we examine the experience of implementing the Ganges agreements from 1977 to the present, it provides answers to many of these questions. The fact is that the Ganges negotiation began and continued on a faulty legal premise. It focused solely on the competing demands and uses in the downstream Ganges without linking these with the upstream uses of the river. The resulting agreements were unique in many respects. They were short-term or fixed-term, primarily centered around the Farakka project, and focused solely on the economic use of the Ganges, neglecting key environmental issues.

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Cover of the book ‘Sharing Ganges Water’.

As a result, the agreements, including the long-term 1996 Treaty, have failed to fully achieve their goals of equity and no harm. The joint river commission assigned to monitor the implementation of the 1996 treaty meets irregularly, and the state parties have shown no interest in correcting its deficiencies. Regular complaints have been raised from both sides about the poor performance of the treaty.

Furthermore, negotiations on the sharing of other transboundary rivers (such as the Teesta) have not learned from the Ganges experience and have thus failed to produce any significant advancements. Most of these negotiations have followed the Ganges pattern, excluding other basin states, limiting data sharing and consultation to water availability at the tail end of the river, disregarding the need for maintenance of environmental flows, and failing to establish a powerful and autonomous river commission.

The 1996 Ganges treaty will expire in 2026. It also provided for conducting negotiations for sharing the water of other common rivers based on equity and no harm principles. Unless it is renewed, there will be no negotiated arrangement for Ganges water sharing or agreed basis for negotiations on other rivers in the post-2026 period.

A modified Ganges Treaty involving all of its basin states (Nepal, India, and Bangladesh) should be concluded before it expires in 2026. It is high time to learn the lessons of the past and thus reposition the course of future negotiations, taking due account of the recent developments in international law that inspire integrated basin-wide development of rivers.

Bangladesh and India (along with all the basin states of South Asia) should have a wider vision to understand that integrated, multilateral, and basin-wide water resource management would be a much better approach to accommodate the various needs of the basin states of any international river and to ensure its adequate protection. They need to understand that the equitable utilization or no-harm principles cannot be translated into reality without the equitable participation of all the basin states, comprehensive data sharing (including through participatory EIA) on all the actual and potential water uses, negotiated arrangements on that basis, continuous monitoring, and efficient conflict resolution mechanisms. In accomplishing these, they should respect and embrace the customary rules reflected in the 1997 Watercourse Convention and other relevant instruments. They should also consider the recent increasing focus on related environmental obligations, human rights aspects, and the need for an efficient institutional regime, as elaborated in the 1992 UNECE Watercourse Convention (global participation opened in 2015) and the 2004 ILA Berlin Rules, and as followed in some water-stressed regions in Asia and Africa such as the Mekong and Senegal basins.

As a vulnerable downstream region to nearly 54 rivers, Bangladesh, in particular, should take the lead by becoming a party to Watercourse Conventions. It should also demand the application of existing international environmental agreements like the 1992 Convention on Biodiversity and the 2015 Paris Agreement on Climate Change, which contain corresponding provisions on the use of international watercourses. Bangladesh could thus influence other co-basin countries to realize that watercourses are precious natural resources that need to be utilized, developed, and managed through an efficient and comprehensive arrangement covering all the uses and involving all the stakeholder States. This realization is crucial for the long-term benefit of the region and the sustainability of the dependent ecosystems.

Dr Asif Nazrul is Professor and Chairman, Department of Law, University of Dhaka.​
 

Saif

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Jan 24, 2024
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906




Latest water-sharing deal between Bangladesh, India is ‘drop in the ocean’​

by Abu Siddique on 14 September 2022

  • Bangladesh and India share 54 rivers that flow down from the Himalayas to the Bay of Bengal, chief among them the Ganges and the Brahmaputra.
  • Managing the flow of water both upstream and down is crucial for agriculture, navigation, inland fisheries, and keeping saltwater intrusion at bay in Bangladesh, but is undermined by a lack of water-sharing agreements.
  • The Bangladeshi and Indian prime ministers recently signed an agreement on sharing water from the Kushiara River for irrigation, but experts say this is nothing special in the grand scheme of things.
  • They’ve called on the governments of both countries to push for securing long-term treaties on water sharing from major rivers like the Ganges and the Teesta, which in the latter case has been hobbled by local politics in India.
Water management experts have derided as “a drop in the ocean” an agreement between Bangladesh and India to share water from the Kushiara River, a minor waterway out of the 54 that flow between the two countries.

In a recent visit to India, Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina signed a memorandum of understanding with her Indian counterpart, Narendra Modi, in which both governments agreed to withdraw the equivalent of 4.3 cubic meters (153 cubic feet) per second of water from the Kushiara during the off-monsoon season from November to May.

“Bangladesh will irrigate 5,000 hectares [12,400 acres] of arable land with this water,” said Malik Fida A. Khan, a member of the Joint Rivers Commission (JRC), a technical body that advises the Bangladesh government on the management of transboundary rivers and water.

Transboundary water experts in Bangladesh, however, say the new agreement is a “drop in the ocean.” They expressed frustration that India, sitting upriver, is unwilling to consider the interests of downstream Bangladesh when it comes to sharing of water from the major rivers flowing from the Himalayas down to the Bay of Bengal.
A transboundary river.


Experts have expressed frustration that India, sitting upriver, is unwilling to consider the interests of downstream Bangladesh when it comes to sharing of water from the major rivers. Image by Abu Siddique/Mongabay.

“I personally do not consider the MOU for Kushiara a special one,” said Ainun Nishat, a former technical member of the JRC and professor emeritus at Bangladesh’s BRAC University.

“Both countries are already withdrawing water from the middle of the river — which is an international border — for irrigation. While formalizing an existing consensus is good, there are several other major issues on transboundary rivers that Bangladesh has raised for a long time, which are not getting priority in India.”

Bangladesh is an active delta formed by sediments carried through the rivers flowing from the Himalayas. The two neighboring countries share at least 54 such rivers, according to the JRC, the most prominent among them being the Ganges and the Brahmaputra. Agriculture, navigation, inland fisheries, and keeping saltwater intrusion at bay are all heavily dependent on the flow of water of these rivers.

Treaties for major rivers

To date, the only ongoing long-term agreement on river management between the countries is the Ganges Water Sharing Treaty of 1996. During PM Hasina’s recent visit to India, both governments agreed to conduct an assessment of the optimum utilization of water received by Bangladesh under the provision of the treaty, which ends in 2025.

“We are looking at this as an ongoing process of getting the treaty prolonged,” said Malik Fida, who also serves as executive director of the Centre for Environmental and Geographic Information Services (CEGIS) and was part of PM Hasina’s entourage during the India visit.

“This assessment should have been done right after the agreement was signed in 1996, as per the treaty,” said Nishat, who played a key role in bringing about the treaty. “But it never took place. It is good to see that it is finally going to happen.”
Boats on Padma river.


Boats on the Padma River. Managing the flow of water both upstream and down is crucial for agriculture, navigation, inland fisheries, and keeping saltwater intrusion at bay in Bangladesh. Image by Marufish via Flickr (CC BY-SA 2.0).

Bangladesh has been seeking a treaty to share the water of the Teesta River, another major common river, for several years.

But while India’s national government has been keen to arrive at an agreement, there’s been resistance from the state government of West Bengal, through which the Teesta flows before entering Bangladesh.

The two countries did reach a provisional agreement in 1983 to share the water of the Teesta during the lean pre-monsoon period, under which Bangladesh would get 36% of the water and India 39%, while 25% would remain unallocated. That agreement ended in 1985 and was extended to 1987, but there’s been no progress since then on reviving it.

In 2011, both the governments were ready to sign an agreement during a visit by then-PM Manmohan Singh of India. But it was canceled at the last minute after the West Bengal chief minister, Mamata Banerjee, pulled out of the visit.

Since then, the issue has been stuck in “discussions.”

“The chances of getting a concrete decision on Teesta water share is very little because of political complexities in India,” Nishat said. “The West Bengal ruling party does not want to lose votes by agreeing to share the water, and at the same time, the ruling party in the Indian central government does not want to antagonize West Bengal voters as they are looking to increase their political stake in the state.”
A transboundary river.


India and Bangladesh share at least 54 rivers that flow from the Himalayas. Image by Abu Siddique/Mongabay.

Role of the JRC

Activists and experts say the Joint Rivers Commission, the body that’s supposed to facilitate discussions on sharing water between the countries, has been ineffective.

The JRC is meant to arrange a regular meeting at least once a year between officials from the two countries. But the latest JRC meeting, held on Aug. 25 this year, came 12 years after the previous one, held in March 2010.

“The gap between the meetings should tell you how effective JRC is and what kind of priority it receives from the government,” said Sheikh Rokon, general secretary of the Riverine People, a river conservation group. He added the JRC in any case is only a facilitator, with no decision-making authority.

“It is the government’s role to discuss and solve the crisis, not the JRC’s,” said Rokon, also a former JRC member. “The meeting is supposed to be held between the governments at the bureaucratic level.”

Nishat said he believes the lack of action on shared water management will lead to a crisis at some point as demand for water rises in both countries.

“We need a comprehensive management plan for the entire basin area by conserving the monsoon water,” he said.

Banner image: Boats on the Padma River, which is the main distributary of the Ganges flowing into Bangladesh. Image by Enamur Reza via Flickr (CC BY 2.0).
 

Saif

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Jan 24, 2024
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906




SECURITY

River Relations: Thirsty Bangladesh’s Water-Sharing Agreement with India​

Wednesday, June 7, 2023

In the geopolitically and geo-economically challenging world, Bangladesh must manage its way in the middle of the fraught relationship between neighbors China and India, as well as the China-US global strategic rivalry. In this context, Genevieve Donnellon-May of the University of Oxford examines Dhaka’s efforts to conclude and implement water-sharing agreements with India.
River Relations: Thirsty Bangladesh’s Water-Sharing Agreement with India

A barrage on the Teesta River: Fifty-four waterways cross the border between India and Bangladesh, with fewer than half covered by bilateral water-sharing agreements (Credit: Nadim Mahmud - Himu / Shutterstock.com)

In September, Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina visited India for a four-day visit. During her trip, the PM and her counterpart Narendra Modi announced that talks on a proposed bilateral Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) would begin. The two countries signed seven memoranda of understanding (MOUs) to strengthen bilateral relations.

They focused on railways, space, science, legal matters and water sharing (for the Kushiyara river on their joint border). The two leaders also issued a statement welcoming the establishment of a joint technical committee on the Ganges River.

The agreements with India come at a challenging time for Bangladesh as it has struggled to weather significant economic and financial crises, food and water insecurity issues, and deal with the continued presence in the country of Rohingya refugees from Myanmar. At the same time, the impact of climate change on the economy is becoming more and more serious. The country has been devastated by flash floods, landslides, and severe erratic rainfall, causing enormous socio-economic and humanitarian damage, including the disruption of clean water supply.

The signing of the agreements also came at a time of increasing geopolitical complications in the region, as China and India’s relationship had come under further stress, especially against the backdrop of the intense China-US rivalry. Bangladesh finds itself in the middle not just of the fraught ties between its neighbors but also the global strategic competition between Beijing and Washington.
A river runs through it: Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh, is one of the most densely populated cities in the world, with more and more people living in flood-prone areas

A river runs through it: Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh, is one of the most densely populated cities in the world, with more and more people living in flood-prone areas

Water management issues and their environmental and security consequences have become wrapped up in this unfolding regional drama, in which Bangladesh is confronted with difficult choices to make.

Consider the dilemma of the dams. Beijing’s dam-building ambitions have raised some alarm in Dhaka, according to media reports. But New Delhi’s own mega hydro-engineering infrastructure initiatives have also caused concern. With its economy under pressure and its food, water and energy security under threat, Bangladesh must pursue its own interests with extreme care and delicate diplomacy.

Transboundary water management between India and Bangladesh ​

Transboundary water management has long been a contentious issue between India and Bangladesh. The absence of water-sharing agreements for the majority of transboundary rivers between them makes it difficult to pursue joint management in any effective way. There are 54 rivers that cross the India-Bangladesh border between upstream India and downstream Bangladesh.

These waterways are part of the drainage system of the Ganga-Brahmaputra-Meghna (GBM) basin. A lifeline to hundreds of millions of people, the GBM basin is the third largest freshwater outlet to the world’s ocean. Only one of the rivers – the Ganges – is subject to a bilateral agreement between India and Bangladesh. For Bangladesh, the Padma (the Ganges), the Jamuna (the Brahmaputra) and the Meghna (the Barak) and their tributaries are considered essential to maintaining the country’s water and food security.

In 1972, a year after Bangladesh’s independence, the India-Bangladesh Joint Rivers Commission (JRC) was formed as a bilateral mechanism to address issues of mutual interest on transboundary rivers, only seven of which were covered by a bilateral water-sharing agreement framework. In August 2022, at the 38th ministerial-level meeting of the JRC, the two countries agreed to broaden cooperation to include eight additional rivers in the data and information program aimed at preparing a draft framework for an interim water-sharing agreement.

Waterway network: To ensure water security, countries need sharing agreements for transboundary rivers (Credit: PopulationData.net)
Waterway network: To ensure water security, countries need sharing agreements for transboundary rivers (Credit: PopulationData.net)

Kushiyara River The non-binding agreement covering the Kushiyara River is the first time that a water-sharing arrangement between the two countries had been signed since the 1996 Ganges Water Treaty (GWT). The Kushiyara River forms on the India-Bangladesh border and is a distributary of the Barak River. It is also an important source of water resources for farmers, boatmen and fishermen in both countries. The pact is expected to facilitate water projects in both south Assam (India) and Sylhet (Bangladesh) regions. According to media reports, Bangladesh plans to withdraw water from the Kushiyara to cultivate crops on land in Sylhet.

Teesta River While progress has been made with the Kushiyara River, this is not the case for the more important waterway, the Teesta. The sharing of the Teesta River, a major transboundary river, has long been a contentious issue between India and Bangladesh. The river, a tributary of the Jamuna (Brahmaputra), begins in the Teesta Kangse glacier and flows through the Indian states of Sikkim and West Bengal before entering Bangladesh. Given the rainfall deficit in West Bengal (India) and Rangpur (Bangladesh), there has been growing water demand in both countries. Further complicating matters, both countries have built diversion dams (or barrages) on the river, roughly 100 kilometers part. The Gajaldoba barrage in India irrigates approximately 920,000 hectares in West Bengal while the Teesta barrage in Bangladesh irrigates 750,000 hectares, further putting pressure on the river’s water resources.

At present, there is no binding water-sharing treaty regarding the use and allocation of Teesta River. For years, Bangladesh has sought to secure such an agreement. From 1983 to 1985, an ad hoc water-sharing agreement of the Teesta was in place. Under this agreement, India was allocated 39 percent of the flow volume, while Bangladesh would receive 36 percent. In 2011, it appeared that a water-sharing agreement for the Teesta River during the dry season (December to March) was likely, with plans to sign an agreement in September that year. Under the draft interim agreement, India would have been allocated the right to 42.5 percent of the water resources, giving Bangladesh the remaining 37.5 percent. India, however, pulled out of the deal, apparently due to strong opposition from West Bengal state’s chief minister, Mamata Banerjee, who is still in office.

Feni River Approximately 116 kilometers long, the Feni River begins in Tripura state (India) and flows southwest to the Chittagong Hill tracts in Bangladesh. At the recent JRC meeting, India requested an early signing of an interim water-sharing agreement on the Feni. Both India and Bangladesh finalized the design and location of the water intake point on the river to meet the water-drinking needs of Sabroom town in Tripura. This was agreed in accordance with the India-Bangladesh October 2019 MOU on the subject. Under this MoU, India may take 1.82 cubic feet per second of water from the river until an agreement is signed. Bangladesh, however, has expressed concern that this arrangement could affect its Muhuri-Feni Irrigation Project.

The Ganges: A bilateral water treaty, which recognizes Bangladesh’s rights as a lower riparian, has been in place since 1996 (Credit: lensnmatter)
The Ganges: A bilateral water treaty, which recognizes Bangladesh’s rights as a lower riparian, has been in place since 1996 (Credit: lensnmatter)

Ganges River The Ganges River, in particular the allocation and development of its water resources, has been another source of contention between India and Bangladesh. A bilateral water treaty, the Ganges Water Treaty, which recognizes Bangladesh’s rights as a lower riparian, has been in place since 1996. The deal was the result of decades of negotiation and sets out the minimum level of water flow to be shared by India and Bangladesh during the dry season (January to May). Although the treaty is set to expire in 2026, it may be renewed by mutual consent. Nonetheless, it is not without major challenges such as the growing water demand-supply gap exacerbated by agricultural activities and industrialization, as well as a declining volume in groundwater and water availability. The Ganges Water Treaty has also been criticized for having underestimated the impact of climate variability and possibly increasing upstream water abstraction.

Climate change concerns ​

The non-binding water-sharing pact over the Kushiyara River and the absence of one for the Teesta River must be viewed in the context of growing concern over the impact of climate change in Bangladesh as manifested by the “worst floods in a century” that the country experienced in 2022. These floods have threatened clean water supply, agriculture, infrastructure and livelihoods.

Bangladesh is often considered one of the most vulnerable economies in the world to climate change, given its disadvantageous geographic location and low-lying topography with long coastlines and floodplains occupying 80 percent of the country. Estimates suggest that by 2050, one in seven people in Bangladesh will be displaced by climate change. In 2018, a report from the US government stated that approximately 90 million people in Bangladesh (around 56 percent of the population) live in “high climate exposure areas”, while 53 million people live in “very high exposure areas”. In June 2022, researchers reported that approximately 70 million people in Bangladesh live in flood-prone areas.

Concerns about the impact of climate change in Bangladesh are made worse by the associated rise in waterborne diseases and respiratory illnesses, unmanageable rapid urbanization, weak local governance, high population density, high levels of poverty, and also reliance of livelihoods on climate-reliant sectors such as agricultural production. This has made Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh, one of the world’s most densely populated cities, with more and more people living in flood-prone areas. Recent research found that precipitation has become more unpredictable, while rivers have been rising above dangerous levels more often. One research paper notes that if global temperatures rise by two degrees Celsius, flooding along the Brahmaputra (in Bangladesh and northeast India) is expected to rise by 24 percent. Similarly, if there is an increase by four degrees Celsius, flooding is expected to increase by over 60 percent.
Sheikh Hasina and Narendra Modi: Beijing warned Dhaka against joining the Quad (Credit: Press Information Bureau, Prime MInister's Office, Government of India)

Sheikh Hasina and Narendra Modi: Beijing warned Dhaka against joining the Quad (Credit: Press Information Bureau, Prime MInister's Office, Government of India)

Domestic economic and financial concerns ​

There have been a growing number of reports of the worsening state of Bangladesh’s economy. Dhaka’s requests to the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the World Bank, and various multilateral institutions and donor agencies to keep the economy afloat indicates the seriousness of the economic and financial crisis that Bangladesh is facing. Early this year, the IMF approved a US$4.7 billion loan, with US$1.4 billion of the funds coming from the lending organization’s new Resilience and Sustainability Facility (RSF), making Bangladesh the first Asian country to access that mechanism.

While the country does have a higher per-capita gross domestic product (GDP) than India, outperforms other major South Asian countries in key socio-economic metrics and has also reduced the level of poverty in recent decades, Bangladesh is a facing a number of crucial challenges. As the Atlantic Council in Washington notes, these include an increasing trade deficit, record inflation, daily devaluation of the local currency and a severe energy crisis as well as food insecurity concerns. In addition to external factors such as the Ukraine war, domestic reasons have played a role in contributing to these crises including corruption and cronyism combined with authoritarianism under dynastic rule, the exorbitant costs of mega infrastructure vanity projects, and widespread defaults on loans.

India’s fears over growing Chinese influence in Bangladesh​

Bangladesh finds itself in the middle between China and India with both neighbors aiming to extend their competing spheres of influences in South Asia, while strengthening their regional assertiveness. Dhaka is under pressure from China which is keeping a careful eye on Bangladesh-India relations as well as Bangladesh’s bilateral relations with the US. Last year, Beijing warned Dhaka against joining the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue, known as the Quad – an informal strategic alliance comprising the US, Japan, India and Australia – labelling it a “military alliance aimed against China’s resurgence”.

Nonetheless, viewing India as a common threat, Beijing and Dhaka have formed a strategic partnership which is expected to continue to strengthen. In 2016, Dhaka officially joined the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) and is interested in securing a free trade agreement (FTA) with Beijing. Since joining the BRI, Chinese investment in Bangladesh has reached US$38.05 billion, approximately 10 percent of the country’s GDP. In addition to significant bilateral defense cooperation, Beijing is also Dhaka’s biggest trading partner and importer, direct foreign investor, and supplier of military hardware. Given the Bangladesh’s economic woes and rampant corruption, demonstrated by its diminishing foreign exchange reserves, it needs Chinese support.
Strategic partnership: Bangladesh joined the Belt and Road Initiative in 2016 (Credit: IC)

Strategic partnership: Bangladesh joined the Belt and Road Initiative in 2016 (Credit: IC)

By contrast, India fears that Bangladesh may follow in the footsteps of Nepal and Sri Lanka which are shifting their allegiance to Beijing. China has already passed India as Bangladesh’s biggest trading partner and outbid India’s National Stock Exchange (NSE) for a 25 percent stake in Bangladesh’s Dhaka Stock Exchange (DSE). In addition, New Delhi opposed Beijing’s ambition of constructing a deep-sea port on the Bay of Bengal. Both China’s and India’s hydropower dam-building agendas upstream of major transboundary rivers, including the Brahmaputra, have sparked concern in Bangladesh.

Water sharing and balancing relationships​

Considering that US and the Soviet Union having fought a proxy war through Pakistan and India over Bangladesh’s independence, a Sino-Indian proxy war over Bangladesh would not be out of the question. Given Chinese hydropower ambitions on the upstream of major transboundary rivers which flow into Bangladesh coupled with India’s attempts to prevent further Chinese geo-economic influence over Bangladesh, Dhaka may be able to use this situation to its advantage. In addition to reaching out to the United States to balance Sino-Indian tensions in which it may be embroiled, Dhaka may seek to secure additional agreements with both Beijing and New Delhi, including water-sharing agreements, which fall more in Dhaka’s favor. Considering the enormity of the Bangladesh’s domestic challenges, however, exacerbated by external factors such as the Ukraine-Russia war, finding just the right balance in this geopolitically and geo-economically challenging world will be difficult to achieve.​
 

Saif

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Jan 24, 2024
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The article below talks about India's unilateral withdrawal of water of common rivers disregarding international law. India has been violating the Ganges water sharing deal signed in 1996 to deprive Bangladesh of its legitimate share of Ganges water.
 

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Saif

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Jan 24, 2024
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906




Here’s how NASA scientists study the Padma river​


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Images of the Padma from NASA's Landsat. Image: NASA Earth Observatory

The Padma—a lifeline for thousands of people but also a force for change with far-reaching effects on those who live along its banks, flows through the centre of Bangladesh. Its flowing form has shaped and reshaped the terrain it passes through for decades, defying permanence.

Now, satellite imagery from NASA's Earth Observatory research lab reveals the Padma's dynamic nature, illustrating its growth, meanders, and shifting course over the past 30 years. In a recent blog post, NASA Earth Observatory revealed that Landsat images from 1944-2018 help scientists measure erosion on the Padma river and note differences in the river's width, depth, shape, and overall appearance. "Like parents measuring a child's height, scientists measure erosion on the Padma River by noting differences in its width, depth, shape, and overall appearance," read the blog post.

Landsat satellites, specifically the Thematic Mapper on Landsat 5, the Enhanced Thematic Mapper Plus on Landsat 7, and the Operational Land Imager on Landsat 8, were used for capturing the photos. To emphasise the distinctions between land and water, they use a mix of visible light, near infrared, and shortwave infrared light.

The river's constant evolution poses challenges for those who depend on it for transport and agriculture. Erosion along its 130-kilometre shoreline has claimed swathes of land, displacing communities and altering the region's geography. Since 1967, over 66,000 hectares (256 square miles) of land have eroded and have fallen into the Padma river, according to Earth Observatory which shares information from NASA research.

Sedimentation is one of the main reasons behind the change in water flow. One theory suggests that sedimentation, triggered by seismic events like the 1950 earthquake, has highly influenced its course.

Over the last thirty years, the river has changed its shape a lot. It used to be narrow and straight, but now it meanders, braids, and then goes back to being straight again. The biggest change happened near the Harirampur upazila area, where there was a lot of erosion. In 1998, a big flood made this erosion worse, especially because India's Farakka barrage (dam) released more water into Bangladesh, according to Earth Observatory.

Researchers are also interested in the Char Janajat area, where the Padma Bridge was constructed. Near Char Janajat, the river made bends and eroded the land. The bends were most extreme from 1995 to 1996. They started forming in 1992, decreased by 2002, and now they're gone.
 

Saif

Senior Member
Jan 24, 2024
2,773
906




Int'l Farakka Committee urges Dhaka, Delhi to renew Ganges treaty​

It also calls for signing new treaty on Teesta

1710026112718.png

Farakka Barrage. Photo: Collelcted

The International Farakka Committee today urged Dhaka and Delhi to renew the Ganges Water Sharing Treaty and sign a treaty on the Teesta with guarantee and arbitration clauses.

Announcing a joint statement today at the Jatiya Press Club in Dhaka, Prof Jasim Uddin Ahmed, president of the International Farakka Committee, Bangladesh said that the 54 common rivers shared among the countries could be sustainably developed only based on a basin-wide agreement.​

The press briefing was also addressed by Mostafa Kamal Majumder, convener, IFC, Sirajuddin Sathi, writer and researcher, Tamijuddin Ahmed, Dr. Nazma Ahmad, vice president of IFC Bangladesh, and journalist Rafiqul Islam Azad.

The statement mentioned that the water treaties signed by India with other countries of the subcontinent - Nepal and Pakistan - contain guarantee and arbitration clauses.

As a result, the Indus and Mahakali water treaties have been able to protect mutual interests. On the other hand, the Ganga Water Treaty signed with Bangladesh has not fulfilled the terms.

Because of this error, the relationship between the two friendly countries did not develop as expected.

The Farakka Barrage on the Ganges was commissioned in consultation with Bangladesh, on a trial basis for a total of 41 days from 21 April to 31 May 1975. But since then, unilateral water withdrawals continued and environmental disasters occurred in Bangladesh.

Later in 1977, a five-year water treaty was signed with a guarantee clause of 80 percent water availability. But after the expiry of this treaty, instead of renewing it, a 5-year memorandum of understanding was signed in 1982, minus the guarantee clause.

A 30-year treaty was signed in 1996 for the sharing of Ganges water. The treaty will expire in 2026. Thus, Bangladesh Foreign Minister Dr Hasan Mahmud, during his recent visit to Delhi, urged for the renewal of this treaty and the signing of the Teesta Water Treaty.

Bangladesh did not get water according to the terms of this Ganges Treaty. Nor could it take any effective action on it, because the treaty did not have guarantee and arbitration clauses. This weakness of the treaty must be overcome at the time of renewal.

The agreement on Teesta was supposed to be signed in 2011 during the visit of Indian Prime Minister Man Mohan Singh to Bangladesh. But due to West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee, it has been kept undone till date.

During the dry season, no water from Teesta river is released to Bangladesh. A small amount of water comes to Bangladesh as seepage from Ghazal Doba Barrage in West Bengal.

During the wet season on the other hand due to the full release of floodwaters, thousands of houses are destroyed and massive crop losses occur in the Teesta basin of Bangladesh every year due to severe deluge and bank erosion.

The statement says Bangladesh owes its origin to the river. Therefore, the question of life and death of the people of Bangladesh is associated with the flow of the river. So far, unilateral water withdrawal has increased with the construction of dams in Teesta and other common rivers.

These natural water sources are being killed by altering their courses for short-term benefit by short-sighted damming, it added.​
 

Saif

Senior Member
Jan 24, 2024
2,773
906




ফারাক্কা: মাওলানা আবদুল হামিদ খান ভাসানীর ৯০ বছর বয়সে এক লংমার্চে নেতৃত্ব দেয়ার গল্প​

  • আকবর হোসেন​
  • বিবিসি বাংলা, ঢাকা​
১৬ মে ২০২২
মাওলানা আব্দুল হামিদ খান ভাসানী

ছবির উৎস,মাওলানা ভাসানী স্মারক সংকলন বই
ছবির ক্যাপশান,
মাওলানা আব্দুল হামিদ খান ভাসানী

উনিশশো পঁচাত্তর সালের গোড়ার কথা। পাকিস্তানের কাছ থেকে স্বাধীনতা লাভের কয়েক বছরের মধ্যেই বাংলাদেশের পরিবেশ এবং প্রতিবেশের জন্য বড় এক অন্ধকার এসে হাজির হয়। বাংলাদেশের চাঁপাইনবাবগঞ্জ সীমান্ত থেকে ভারতের ১৮ কিলোমিটার ভেতরে গঙ্গা নদীর উপর একটি বাঁধ নির্মাণ করে ভারত। যেটি ফারাক্কা বাঁধ নামে পরিচিত।

এই বাঁধের প্রভাবে শুকনো মৌসুমে বাংলাদেশের দক্ষিণ-পশ্চিমাঞ্চলে পানির জন্য হাহাকার তৈরি হয়।

কলকাতা বন্দরের নাব্যতা রক্ষার যুক্তি দেখিয়ে ভারত এই ব্যারেজ নির্মাণ করে। ফলে বাংলাদেশে এর বিরূপ প্রভাব পড়ে। বাংলাদেশের দক্ষিণ-পশ্চিমাঞ্চলে এর ক্ষতিকর প্রভাব পড়ে।

উনিশশো ছিয়াত্তর সালের ১৬ই মে ফারাক্কা বাঁধের বিরুদ্ধে চাঁপাইনবাবগঞ্জ সীমান্তের দিকে একটি মিছিলের আয়োজন করেন বাংলাদেশের সুপরিচিত রাজনীতিবিদ মাওলানা আব্দুল হামিদ খান ভাসানী।

এই মিছিল ও সমাবেশ 'ফারাক্কা লংমার্চ' হিসেবে পরিচিত।

কেমন ছিল সেই 'ফারাক্কা লং মার্চ'?​


মাওলানা ভাসানীর দীর্ঘ রাজনৈতিক জীবনে একটি উল্লেখযোগ্য ঘটনা হচ্ছে 'ফারাক্কা লং মার্চ' সংগঠিত করা।
মাওলানা আব্দুল হামিদ খান ভাসানী যখন ফারাক্কা লং মার্চের নেতৃত্ব দেন তখন তার বয়স ৯০ বছরের বেশি।
ফারাক্কা

ছবির উৎস,BBC

উনিশশো ছিয়াত্তর সালের গোড়ার দিকে মাওলানা ভাসানী বার্ধক্যজনিত অসুস্থতার কারণে হাসপাতালে চিকিৎসাধীন ছিলেন।

ছিয়াত্তরের ১৮ই এপ্রিল হাসপাতাল থেকে ফেরার পর মাওলানা ভাসানী ঘোষণা দেন ভারত যদি বাংলাদেশকে পানির অধিকার থেকে বঞ্চিত করে তাহলে তিনি লংমার্চ করবেন।

তাঁর এই কর্মসূচী তখন অনেককে বেশ চমকে দিয়েছিল।

কারণ ৯০ বছরের একজন মানুষের ঘরেই থাকার কথা।

এজন্য ১৬ই মে রাজশাহী শহর থেকে লংমার্চ করার ঘোষণা দেন তিনি।

কর্মসূচী বাস্তবায়নের জন্য ১৯৭৬ সালের ২রা মে মাওলানা ভাসানীকে প্রধান করে ৩১ সদস্যবিশিষ্ট 'ফারাক্কা মিছিল পরিচালনা জাতীয় কমিটি' গঠিত হয়। এর পরে এই কমিটির সদস্য সংখ্যা আরো বৃদ্ধি পায়।

এই লংমার্চের আগে ভারতের তৎকালীন প্রধানমন্ত্রী ইন্দিরা গান্ধীর কাছে একটি চিঠি লিখেন আব্দুল হামিদ খান ভাসানী।

সে চিঠিতে মিসেস গান্ধির কাছে লংমার্চের কারণ বর্ণনা করেন ভাসানী।

সাংবাদিক এনায়েতউল্লাহ খান, আনোয়ার জাহিদ এবং সিরাজুল হোসেন খান এ চিঠি তৈরি করতে আব্দুল হামিদ খান ভাসানীকে সহায়তা করেন।

লংমার্চ সফল করার জন্য ১৯৭৬ সালের ২৮শে এপ্রিল মাওলানা ভাসানী এক বিবৃতিতে সকলের প্রতি আহবান জানান।
১৯৭৫-এ যখন ফারাক্কাতে গঙ্গার ওপর বাঁধ নির্মাণের কাজ চলছে

ছবির উৎস,RONNY SEN
ছবির ক্যাপশান,
১৯৭৫-এ যখন ফারাক্কাতে গঙ্গার ওপর বাঁধ নির্মাণের কাজ চলছে

জাতীয় কৃষক সমিতির আবু নোমান খান সে লংমার্চ সম্পর্কে বিস্তারিত বিবরণ তুলে ধরেছেন মজলুম জননেতা: মাওলানা ভাসানী স্মারক সংকলন' বইতে।

মি. খান লিখেছেন, লংমার্চের মিছিল রাজশাহী থেকে প্রেমতলী, প্রেমতলী থেকে চাঁপাইনবাবগঞ্জ, চাঁপাইনবাবগঞ্জ থেকে মনকষা এবং মনকষা থেকে শিবগঞ্জ পর্যন্ত ৬৪ মাইল অতিক্রম করবে।

মাওলানা ভাসানীর অনুসারীরা তাকে একজন রাজনীতিবিদের চেয়ে 'দার্শনিক' হিসেবেই বেশি বিবেচনা করতেন।

তার সমর্থকরা মনে করেন, ৪৫ বছর আগে ফারাক্কা বাঁধ সম্পর্কে মাওলানা ভাসানী যা অনুমান করেছিলেন, পরবর্তীতে সেটিই ঘটেছে।

বাংলাদেশের একজন লেখক আহমদ ছফাকে উদ্ধৃত করে ১৯৯৫ সালে দৈনিক ভোরের কাগজে ফরহাদ মজহার লিখেছেন, "বাংলাদেশের সর্বনাশ ঘটছে এটা তার চেয়ে স্পষ্ট করে কেউই বোঝে নাই।"

উনিশশো ছিয়াত্তর সালের ১৬ ই মে রাজশাহী শহর থেকে ফারাক্কা অভিমুখে মিছিল শুরু হয়। হাজার-হাজার মানুষ সমবেত হয় সেই মিছিল ও জনসভায়।

সে সময় বাংলাদেশ বেতার রাজশাহী কেন্দ্রের বার্তা বিভাগে কর্মরত ছিলেন হাসান মীর। তার বাড়িও রাজশাহীতে।

মি. মীর তখন লংমার্চের ঘটনা প্রত্যক্ষ করেছেন।

তিনি বিবিসি বাংলাকে বলেন, সাংগঠনিক তৎপরতা জোরদার করতে দুই-তিন দিন আগেই তিনি মাওলানা ভাসানী রাজশাহী এসে পৌঁছান।
ফারাক্কায় গঙ্গার ওপর বাঁধ

ছবির উৎস,বিবিসি
ছবির ক্যাপশান,
ফারাক্কায় গঙ্গার ওপর বাঁধ

হাসান মীরের বর্ণনায়, "রাজশাহী শহরে তখন অচেনা মানুষের ভিড়। লংমার্চে অংশ নিতে দেশের বিভিন্ন এলাকা থেকে সর্বস্তরের মানুষ আসছে। রাস্তায় রাস্তায় লাউড স্পিকারে ঘোষণা হচ্ছে - ১৬ই মে রোববার মাদ্রাসা মাঠ থেকে লংমার্চ শুরু করবে। বাসা থেকে বেতার ভবনে যাওয়ার সময় দেখলাম পথঘাট লোকে লোকারণ্য। বিশাল মাদ্রাসা মাঠে ভীড় উপচে পড়ছে। "

সেই লংমার্চের খবর সংগ্রহ করতে রাজশাহী গিয়েছিলেন সাংবাদিক মোনাজাত উদ্দিন। তিনি তখন দৈনিক সংবাদের জন্য খবরা-খবর পাঠাতেন।

মোনাজাত উদ্দিনের স্মৃতিচারণমূলক লেখা 'পথ থেকে পথে' বইতে সেই লংমার্চের কিছু বিষয় বর্ণনা করেছেন।

মোনাজাত উদ্দিন লিখেছেন, "মিছিলের আগে মাদ্রাসা ময়দানে জনসভা। ভাসানী এলেন নীল গাড়িতে চেপে। জনসমুদ্র গর্জে উঠল। খুব অল্প সময়ের জন্য তিনি বক্তৃতা করলেন। বহু সাংবাদিক, বহু ফটোগ্রাফার।"

লংমার্চের ৬৪ কিলোমিটার যাত্রা ছিল বেশ কঠিন।

সবচেয়ে বড় আশংকা ছিল মাওলানা ভাসানীকে নিয়ে।

এমনিতেই তার বয়স ৯০ বছরের বেশি।

তার উপর কিছুদিন আগেই তিনি হাসপাতাল থেকে ছাড়া পেয়েছেন।

'মাওলানা ভাসানীর জীবনস্রোত' শিরোনামে একটি লেখায় সেই লং মার্চ সম্পর্কে বিস্তারিত বিবরণ দিয়েছেন জাতীয় কৃষক সমিতির সাবেক সপ্তর সম্পাদক আবু নোমান খান।

"মিছিলের শুরুতে ভাসানীসহ নেতৃবৃন্দ পুরোভাগে দাঁড়ান। মিছিলটি তিন মাইল দুরে রাজশাহী কোর্ট এলাকায় যেতে না যেতেই মুষলধারে বৃষ্টি নামে। তা সত্ত্বেও লক্ষ জনতার মিছিল এগিয়ে চলে। এগারো মাইল অতিক্রম করে প্রেমতলী পৌঁছে। তখন দুপুর দুটো," লিখেছেন আবু নোমান খান।

সেখানে কিছুক্ষণ বিশ্রাম নিয়ে বিকেল তিনটা নাগাদ লংমার্চ আবারো যাত্রা শুরু করে। এরপর প্রায় ২০ মাইল পথ অতিক্রম করে রাতে চাঁপাইনবাবগঞ্জ পৌঁছে মিছিলটি। রাতে সেখানেই তারা অবস্থান করেন। পরদিন সকাল আট ৮ টায় আবারো যাত্রা শুরু করে লংমার্চ। চাঁপাইনবাবগঞ্জ থেকে আরো ছয় মাইল পথ অতিক্রম করে কানসাট পৌঁছায়।

দুপুরের মধ্যে মিছিলটি পৌঁছে কানসাটে।

আবু নোমান খানের বর্ণনায়, "পথের দুধারে সারি বেঁধে দাঁড়িয়েছে হাজার-হাজার মানুষ - উদ্দেশ্য ফারাক্কা লং মার্চ-এর মিছিলকারীদের অভ্যর্থনা জানানো। মিছিলকারীদের পানি ও বিভিন্ন খাবার খাইয়েছেন তারা। "
হার্ডিঞ্জ ব্রিজ

ছবির উৎস,বিবিসি বাংলা​
ছবির ক্যাপশান,

ফারাক্কা বাঁধের কারণে বাংলাদেশের কুষ্টিয়ার পদ্মা নদীর উপর হার্ডিঞ্জ ব্রিজের নিচ দিয়ে শুষ্ক মৌসুমে গাড়ি চলতে পারে।

বিকেল চারটার দিকে সেখানে জনসভায় বক্তব্য রাখেন মাওলানা ভাসানী। সে জনসভায় তিনি বলেন, ফারাক্কা সমস্যার সমাধানের জন্য ভারত যদি বাংলাদেশের মানুষের দাবি উপেক্ষা করে তাহলে ভারতীয় পণ্য বর্জনের আন্দোলন শুরু হবে।

হাসান মীর বলেন, "তিনি বাড়তি কোন ঝুঁকি নিতে চাননি বলে মিছিলকারীদের সীমান্তের কাছে যেতে নিষেধ করেন। আর এভাবেই মাওলানা ভাসানীর ঐতিহাসিক ফারাক্কা লংমার্চের সমাপ্তি ঘটে।"

ফারাক্কা লং মার্চের পর থেকে মাওলানা ভাসানীর শারীরিক অবস্থার অবনতি হতে থাকে। তখন থেকে মাওলানা ভাসানীর বেশিরভাগ দিন কেটেছে হাসপাতালে চিকিৎসার জন্য।

অগাস্ট মাসের মাঝামাঝি চিকিৎসার জন্য তাকে লন্ডন নিয়ে যাওয়া হয়।

উনিশশো ছিয়াত্তর সালের ১৭ ই নভেম্বর ঢাকা মেডিকেল কলেজ ও হাসপাতালে মাওলানা ভাসানীর মৃত্যু হয়।

ভারত কেন ফারাক্কা বাঁধ নির্মাণ করেছিল?​

পলিমাটি জমে কলকাতা বন্দরের গভীরতা কমে যাওয়ায় কারণে বাংলাদেশের সীমান্ত থেকে ১৮ মাইল উজানে মনোহরপুরের কাছে ফারাক্কা বাঁধ নির্মাণ করে ভারত।

এই প্রকল্পের উদ্দেশ্য ছিল পশ্চিমবঙ্গের ভাগীরথী নদীতে পানি প্রবাহ বাড়ানো। সেজন্য গঙ্গা নদী থেকে বিপুল পরিমাণ পানি ভাগীরথী-হুগলী নদীতে নিয়ে যাওয়া হয়।

যাতে করে সেখানে জমে থাকা পলিমাটি পানিতে ভেসে যায় এবং কলকাতা বন্দরের গভীরতা বজায় থাকে।

উনিশশো চুয়াত্তর সালে বাংলাদেশ ও ভারতের প্রধানমন্ত্রী এক বৈঠকে একমত হন যে শুষ্ক মৌসুমে পানি ভাগাভাগির বিষয়ে দুই দেশ একটি চুক্তিতে না পৌঁছানো পর্যন্ত ফারাক্কা বাঁধ চালু করা হবে না।

কিন্তু ভারত সে কথা রাখেনি। উনিশশো পঁচাত্তর সালের শুরুর দিকে ভারত বাংলাদেশকে জানায় যে ফারাক্কা বাঁধের ফিডার ক্যানেল পরীক্ষা করা প্রয়োজন।

পঁচাত্তরের সালের ২১ শে এপ্রিল থেকে মাত্র ১০ দিনের জন্য এটি পরীক্ষার কথা বলেছিল ভারত। এতে বাংলাদেশ রাজী হয়। কিন্তু এরপরেও ভারত একতরফাভাবে গঙ্গানদীর গতি পরিবর্তন করে।

শেষ পর্যন্ত ১৯৯৬ সালে ২১ বছর পর আওয়ামী লীগ সরকার ক্ষমতায় ফিরে এলে গঙ্গার পানি বণ্টন চুক্তি সাক্ষরিত হয়।

এর আগে বিভিন্ন সরকারের সময় বিষয়টি জাতিসংঘসহ বিভিন্ন ফোরামে উত্থাপন করে ভারতের উপর আন্তর্জাতিক চাপ সৃষ্টির চেষ্টা করা হয়। কিন্তু তাতে খুব একটা লাভ হয়নি।

ছিয়ানব্বই সালে পানি বণ্টন চুক্তি সাক্ষরের পরেও অভিযোগ রয়েছে, শুষ্ক মওসুমে ভারত চুক্তি অনুযায়ী বাংলাদেশকে পানি দেয় না।​
 

Saif

Senior Member
Jan 24, 2024
2,773
906




Our dying Padma​

Poor upstream flow turns the river dry, farmers and fishers in trouble

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The mighty Padma now lies as a pale imitation of its former self. Depletion in the flow of water from upstream, along with deposition of silt, has choked the riverbed, rendering it nearly unrecognisable.
"Due to poor discharge of water at Farakka Point, water flow reduced by 10-20 thousand cusecs at Hardinge Bridge point in last couple of months. The poor upstream flow, alongside poor rainfall, is drying up the river alarmingly."​

— Md Rezaul Karim Executive engineer, Department of Hydrology​

The depletion of its flow along with the lack of rainfall has exposed vast stretches of the riverbed, where millions of tonnes of silt accumulate every year. The water in the river is now visible for only three to four months. The remaining eight to nine months see the water level plummet to its lowest point, revealing miles of sandy char lands across the river's expanse.

The mighty Padma, is now dying. Where boats and even big ships used to cruise once has now become crop fields at some places, while being turned into narrow ponds scattered across riverbeds in other places.

"I have never seen Padma dried up so much before," said Md Chand Ali, 50, a fisherman of Pakshey village under Pabna's Ishwardi upazila.

"Earlier, even during dry season, I could catch at least 3-4 kilogrammes of fish daily. Now, catching barely 1kg of fish is difficult due to poor water flow in the river," he said.

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The river is completely dry across the area under the Hardinge Bridge, while huge number of shoals have emerged everywhere, Chand Ali added. Other fishermen from the area echoed him.

According to hydrology experts, the mighty Padma dried up significantly this year due to poor water flow from upstream, adversely affecting the livelihoods of hundreds of fishermen from the areas adjoining the river.

Irrigation has been badly affected as the operation of pumps of the Ganges-Kobadak project has remained suspended due to poor flow.

"We need a minimum water level of 4.5-metre for pump operation in the G-K project. The water level was more than 5-metre around this time last year. At present, the water level is at 4.07-metre which is inadequate, disrupting the country's biggest irrigation project," said Md Abdul Hamid, director of G-K project.

The three main pumps, which have been providing irrigation water for 96,000 hectares of agricultural land in the southern districts, are yet to resume operation this year, while subsidiary pumps have been out of services since 2002 for technical faults, he added.

Bangladesh reportedly got a poor supply of water in the first couple of months this year as per the Ganges Water Sharing Treaty due to poor flow of water at Farakka Point, said Md Rezaul Karim, executive engineer of Department of Hydrology, Pabna division.

According to the Joint Rivers Commission report, the flow of water at Hardinge Bridge point recorded at each 10-day cycle between January 1 and March 10 this year were 63,113 cusecs, 48,518 cusecs, 48,359 cusecs, 43,926 cusecs, 34,697 cusecs, 35,751 cusecs and 36,818 cusecs.

Around the same time in 2023, the figures recorded in the JRC report were 85,316 cusecs, 70,827 cusecs, 69,990 cusecs, 67,364 cusecs, 59,376 cusecs, 47,891 cusecs and 42, 372 cusecs.

"Due to poor discharge of water at Farakka Point, water flow reduced by 10-20 thousand cusecs at Hardinge Bridge point in the last couple of months. The poor upstream flow, alongside poor rainfall, is drying up the river alarmingly," Rezaul Karim also said.

According to the Ganges Water Sharing Treaty, both Bangladesh and India will get 50 percent share of water if the available water level at Farakka Point is 70,000 cusecs or less. If the level is 70-75 thousand cusecs, Bangladesh will get minimum 35,000 cusecs and India will get the rest. If the level is 75,000 cusecs or more, then India will get a minimum of 40,000 cusecs and Bangladesh will get the rest.

Both Bangladesh and India will surely get a minimum 35,000 cusecs water from March 11 till May 10, according to the treaty.

Experts, however, opined that the treaty should be reshuffled considering the present perspective of the river's water flow.​
 

Saif

Senior Member
Jan 24, 2024
2,773
906




Dying rivers in independent Bangladesh
Pavel Partha | Published: 00:00, Mar 26,2024

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DURING the liberation war, people of this land chanted, ‘[The River] Padma, Meghna, Jamuna is our destiny (Padma, Meghna, Jamnuna, tomar amar thikana’). Bangladesh — the birth of the nation and the struggle for its independence were inspired by the rivers of this land. As we celebrate 53rd Independence Day, do we dare to ask how the rivers that bore witness to the heroic struggles and sacrifices of our freedom fighters and carried the dead bodies of ordinary citizens when families were not allowed to bury their dead are doing? Are streams of our rivers enjoying the freedom of flowing freely in an independent nation? Has the geography of the rivers been evolving without any hindrances in the past decades? The environmentally insensitive anti-river development policy has paved the way for the slow death of many rivers. Many rivers are now part of forgotten history. Every day, almost every day, newspapers are burdened with stories of their deaths. The silent cries of dying rivers are ringing, but the state remains unperturbed. Rivers are stolen in plain sight. Barely anyone cares. No brave environmental court is there to speak for the rights of the dying rivers.

Have we always been an anti-river nation? Vernacular history does not say so. Historically, our lives revolved around the rivers of Bangladesh. Yet, a recent report by the National River Conservation Commission says that of the 770 rivers that historically flowed through the country, only 405 have survived. More than 100 rivers have been lost since independence. How did it happen? On Independence Day, we must raise the river question to understand the lost love for our rivers. Why are rivers disappearing? It is because economic development is happening at the cost of our ecological integrity. The neo-liberal development model that successive governments adopted failed to recognise the historical significance of the river for Bangladesh and its people. Sadly, the government celebrates the country’s graduation from the least developed country to a developing nation, standing on the graves of many rivers.

NATURE, ecosystem, life-philosophy, economy, and politics in our country evolved around the river system. All the rivers — Brahmaputra, Padma, Surma, Teesta, Meghna, Karnaphuli, Naaf, Sitalakhya, Mogra, Feny, Dakatia, Monu, Rakti, Kopotakhya, Langla, Dhaleshweri, Karotoa, Ichamoti, Raymangal, Sangkha, Halda, Kangsha, Titas, Piyan, Ubdakhali, Jadukata, Simsang, Boral, Baleswar, Garai, Turag and many more — are either dying or struggling to maintain their mark on our national map.

In the river basins, different forms of production systems developed. The development of capital and the expansion of trade relations also followed the river basins. In 1722, almost 300 years ago, the construction work of the Kantajee temple began in Dinajpur. The terracotta on the walls of this temple has scenes from many boat journeys. Not too far from this temple is the River Tepa, which is now in really bad shape. The way the River Ganga is the god of water, Khoyaz Khizir and Badar Gazi are similarly the prophets of water. This is how the river remains central to the belief system of the subaltern lives. The history of Muslin and Zamdani is intrinsically linked with the river basins of Buriganga and Sitalakhya. Many weaving traditions in Bangladesh — Pabna taat, Tangtail taat, Bana taat of Hajongs and many weaving techniques from the Chittagong Hill Tracts — are also dependent on the local rivers. Many varieties of paddy and diverse agricultural traditions are embedded in the history of the river in Bangladesh. The saying that Bengalis live on rice and fish (‘Mache-bhate Bangali’) is situated in this unique history.

The neoliberal development process has defied the natural growth and life of a river and disrupted the economy dependent on the river system in Bangladesh. In the 1960s, Norman Ernest Borlaug, an American agronomist, was awarded the Noble Peace Prize for his discovery of high-yield crops, which then prompted what is now known as the Green Revolution. This mode of agriculture is technology-dependent and encourages groundwater extraction and the use of chemical fertilizers. In the long run, this mode of agriculture has proven to be harmful for the farmland and ecology in general. Before the introduction of high-yielding agricultural systems, farmers were dependent on rivers, ponds, rainwater, and other forms of natural sources of water. People were following the grammar and philosophy of nature. However, in independent Bangladesh, successive governments uncritically adopted the philosophy and technology of the green revolution, discrediting farmers’ knowledge, silencing the voices of subaltern people, and killing their relationship with the river and their surrounding nature. In the name of food security, through the farming of high-yield crops, subsidised access to chemical fertilisers poisoned the farm land, and the unregulated extraction of groundwater depleted water resources. When rivers and other water bodies are considered the lifeline of forests and biodiversity, the agricultural policy of the government launched an implicit and explicit destructive campaign.

ONE after another, industrial units are established. The largest multinational corporate apparel units, such as Adidas, Hilfiger, Philip Maurice, and Nike, supplied from Bangladesh. These factories serve the profit-seeking interests of the global and local business elite but have no regard for our rivers as they are discharging their industrial waste into rivers. The tanneries in Hazaribagh were responsible for the death of the River Buriganga. The shrimp industry in the north-western region destroyed the river system in the region. The commercial tea gardens, tobacco farming, aggressive acacia and eucalyptus gardens, and farming of hybrid corn contributed to the slow death of our rivers. All these were continued in the name of economic development.

All economic and industrial sectors — agriculture, fishery, apparel — one way or another are responsible for the death of our rivers. Such is the state policy. No one is made accountable; no one is brought to justice. As if the death of rivers would liven up our economy and improve our GDP. And the calculation of GDP follows the logic of capitalism. In the way neo-liberal corporate capital penetrates our economy, it invades our development philosophy with an anti-river mentality.

THE origins of the main rivers of Bangladesh are in India, Myanmar, Tibet, or China. Hence, the violence against rivers is not restricted within national boundaries. Neighbouring countries are equally oppressive and violent towards transboundary rivers. The Farkka barrage, the Teesta barrage, the Tipaimukh dam, and many hydropower projects in India have obstructed river flows, caused flash floods, or contributed to serious water crises in Bangladesh. The corporate-sponsored unplanned coal mining in north-eastern India also influenced our river system, particularly in the Sylhet division. Yet, river diplomacy in Bangladesh is not river-friendly. The state takes pride in not signing the UNECE Convention on the Protection and Use of Transboundary Watercourses and International Lakes (the Water Convention) and promotes pro-dam development policy.

Scientific studies now confirm that the arbitrary withdrawal of water upstream across the border by India is slowly but steadily killing Bangladesh’s two major rivers and associated socio-economic and aquatic systems. Recent research conducted by a group of national and international researchers observed that the river’s health has progressively deteriorated since the opening of the Farakka Barage across the River Ganga in India. In the past decades, the water flow in the river Padma has decreased by 26 per cent and the river’s permanent water area has shrunk by 50 per cent during the dry season. The study conducted on a 70-kilometre area of the Padma from Godagari to Sarada in Rajshahi concluded that nearly one-third of the native fish species that were available in 1982 had disappeared. The permanent water area and the depth of the river have also significantly reduced, from 140 square kilometres in 1984 to 70 square kilometres in 2019. India has diverted an increased proportion of flow to the river Hooghly through the Farakka Barrage, which has contributed to the declining river health in Bangladesh.

The anti-river neoliberal development psyche of the state must be challenged. The tide and ebb of a river is its natural right to live that a state must protect. The rivers of Bangladesh can liven up Bangladesh’s sovereign, self-reliant economy. Rivers are not private property or any form of material property that can be owned, but the state’s indifference towards the ecological life of rivers has allowed vested quarters to feast on rivers. There is a High Court directive declaring rivers as legal entities and assigning the National River Protection Commission as the legal guardian to act as their parents in protecting the rights of waterbodies, canals, beels, shorelines, hills, and forests. Yet, violence against rivers continues unabated.

In riverine Bangladesh, how much more injustice to our river should we tolerate? We need real ecological emancipation of our rivers. In this struggle for emancipation, in which the ecological and environmental integrity of the nation will be treated as equally significant as the national economy, we must commit to the cause of our rivers. On the occasion of the 53rd Independence Day of Bangladesh, if we want to remain true to the historic slogan, ‘Padma, Meghna, Jamuna (also Karnaphuli, Simsung) is where we belong’, we must commit to the cause of rivers and resist any violence against our rivers.

Pavel Partha is a writer and researcher. Translated from Bangla by Anmona Zoardar.​
 

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