Altercations between States especially on
sharing of river waters has been common … this one is perhaps different….. It is
all about water – which has flamed the States to become warring factions and
placed at Parliament and doorsteps of Apex
Court. In a
land fueled by perceived notions, a movie Dam 999 further fueled the
hysteria. The river originates from the
Sivagiri peaks (1800m MSL) of Sundaramala in Tamil Nadu; runs a total length of about 244 Kms, flows
northwards for 48 kms and at Thekkady joins the west-flowing Mullayar – it is
the river Periyar on which the dam constructed is a bone of contention – the
Mullaperiyar dam. The Mullaperiyar Dam
is a masonry gravity dam on the Periyar
River, located 881 m (2,890 ft) above
mean sea level on the Cardamom Hills of the Western Ghats
in Thekkady, Idukki District of Kerala.
It was constructed between 1887 and 1895 by the British Government to
divert water eastwards to Madras Presidency area (the present-day Tamil Nadu).
It traces back to the dates of Maharaja of Travancore
signing a lease with the Centre for irrigation works in 1886. In 1970 a deal permitted Tamilnadu to
generate power … this century has seen legal battle between TN and Kerala on
dam’s height. In 2006 Kerala passed an Act
prohibiting raising of water level beyond 136 feet. Tamil Nadu naturally is
feeling happy with the judgment of Supreme Court agreeing to raise the water
level of Mullaperiyar dam. It is the culmination of a long 15-year-old legal
battle when the Supreme Court on Wednesday
allowed it to raise water level in the dam up to 142 feet. The apex court
pulled up the Kerala government for enacting a law prohibiting raising of water
level beyond 136 ft in February 2006 and thereby over-ruling its verdict, by
which it had declared the dam safe and allowed the Tamil Nadu authorities to
raise the water level. The Kerala
Irrigation and Water Conservation (Amendment) Act, 2006 passed by the Kerala
legislature has been quashed as "unconstitutional".
A five-judge Constitution Bench of Chief Justice R.M.
Lodha and Justices H.L. Dattu, C.K. Prasad, Madan B. Lokur and M.Y. Eqbal,
allowing the suit filed by TN permanently restrained Kerala from interfering
with the rights of Tamil Nadu from raising the water level in the dam from 136 ft
to 142 ft. Justice Lodha, who wrote the judgment, also restrained Kerala from
enforcing its law on Tamil Nadu. The Bench said the Constitution envisaged
separation of powers among the Executive, Judiciary and Legislature and one
should not encroach into the domain of the other. Independence of the judiciary and courts
alone would ensure rule of law, the Bench said. The Bench said the Legislature
could only amend the law but could not invalidate a judgment or a decree passed
by the court. The law enacted by Kerala legislature was an attempt to interfere
with the judicial functioning, the Bench said and struck the law as
unconstitutional and void.
To allay the apprehensions of Kerala, though none exists,
the Bench said the committee should make periodic inspection of the dam, before
the monsoon and during the monsoon and take all steps necessary for the safety
of the dam. The Kerala government was directed to allow Tamil Nadu to carry out
all repairs and take all other steps for the safety of the dam.
The Supreme Court’s judgment in the
Mullaperiyar dam case has comprehensively settled the inter-State row, which
has been bothering Tamil Nadu and Kerala for over 30 years, according to senior
water experts. One would logically expect the instruction of the Apex Court to
prevail but politics that too regional flavor is a different cup of tea. The dam issue has already stoked passions
and created a lot of bad blood between
the people of the neighbouring states, which even led to attacks,
counter-attacks and an economic blockade.
As some point out poignantly, on February 19,
2013, the Union government notified the final order of the Cauvery Water
Disputes Tribunal, as demanded by Tamil Nadu for long. The gazette notification
took its own time ……. and whether it is fully implemented is too well known.
The immediate reaction in the neighbouring state is a
dawn-to-dusk hartal called by the Mullaperiyar Action Council. Though no
political party has so far come out in support of the hartal call, almost the
entire political spectrum in the State has expressed shock and dismay at the
Supreme Court verdict. Chief Minister Oommen Chandy was cautious in his
response to the verdict and told reporters in Thiruvananthapuram that the
government would continue to pursue measures aimed at ensuring safety of the
life and property of the people of the State after studying the text of the
verdict. Water Resources Minister P.J. Joseph told reporters that the
government would explore possibilities for filing a review petition in the
Supreme Court.
With regards – S. Sampathkumar
8th May 2o14.
Photo credit : newskerala.com