47. SAD rides SYL canal row to
fight off anti incumbency
woo farmers
Chandigarh: It is not very
difficult to understand why Punjab Chief
Minister Parkash Singh Badal is stirring the
Sutlej Yamuna Link (SYL) canal row.
Akali Dal in collaboration
with the BJP has been in power for two
consecutive terms and the anti-incumbency factor
has been growing against it. Next Assembly
elections in Punjab are due early in 2017. With
less than a year left for the Akalis for the
poll, the alliance was in search of an emotive
issue through which they can manage to win the
support of the people to retain power for the
third time.
Panthic and farmers’ issues
are the two most important emotive aspects from
the point of view of elections in the state. For
the last one year the Akalis have been trying to
address the two issues aggressively by amendment
to the Sikh Gurdwaras Act 1925 in Rajya Sabha
and now by the SYL canal dispute. In Akali's
view, the heady mix of religion, economics and
emotions should win the people’s support in its
favour. The Punjab government also presented a
very populist budget recently with several doles
worth Rs 1,200 crore to many sectors as yet
another attempt to please the electorate. The
SYL row may have created bad blood among the
neighbouring states of Punjab and Haryana but
has won Akalis the support of the farmers.
Till recently poll pundits
had been writing Akalis off in the next year’s
elections on the basis of the rising discontent
and anger against the government on Panthic and
farmers issues. There was a wave of anger
against the government over grant of pardon to
Dera Sacha Sauda chief Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh
and sacrilege incidents. This led to holding of
'Sarbat Khalsa’ against the wishes of the SGPC.
At the moment the Akalis
seem to have bounced back by playing the SYL
card. The Akalis used the festering row over
sharing of Ravi-Beas waters to its advantage by
passing in the Punjab Vidhan Sabha a bill
against construction of contentious SYL canal.
The government also announced to return around
4,000 acres of land acquired from the farmers
free of cost to the original land owners. This
pleased the farmers no end as they got the land
back for which they had earlier been paid money.
Wasting no time the
government sent hundreds of JCB machines to the
SYL canal site at different places to filling up
the canal built 40 years ago. Akali leaders
rushed to the site to ensure a symbolic end to
the SYL issue. It is another matter that the
river water meant for Haryana was never made
available. Badals have been shouting from
rooftops that not an inch of SYL canal water
would be given to Haryana or anyone else.
The water issue has been
used very cleverly by the Akalis to win over the
support of the masses in the state. The Punjab
government also returned an amount of Rs 191.75
crore to Haryana towards the cost incurred by it
on the construction of the SYL canal. Off course
Haryana Chief Minister Manohar Lal did not
accept the cheque and returned it to Punjab but
the government managed to score the point how
serious it was on the emotive issue. By the time
the Supreme Court gave its order of maintaining
'status quo’ on the SYL canal it had already
been filled at most of the places
An enraged Haryana
protested immediately and even passed a
resolution in the Vidhan Sabha condemning
Punjab’s 'unconstitutional' move. At the moment
the Akalis are having their cakes and eating
them two. Such is the irony of the situation
that the opposition parties Congress and the AAP
have been forced to toe the government line and
support the SYL bill. It would be political
hara-kiri for any party in Punjab now to oppose
the SYL issue.
Earlier moving the SYL bill
in the Punjab Vidhan Sabha Chief
Minister Parkash Singh Badal said, "The bill has
been taken on a priority basis as Punjab has no
surplus waters to share it with other states."
He said that a water crisis existed in Punjab
and if a drop of water flows to other states
from rivers of Punjab, it will be very dangerous
for the state.
Sharing of the Ravi-Beas
waters has been a matter of contention between
Punjab and Haryana for years altogether. In the
past Punjab governments, be it of Akalis or the
Congress have refused to 'share even a drop of
water'. It was in 2004 when the
Captain Amarinder Singh-led Congress government
in the state passed the highly controversial
Termination of Agreements Act 2004 to annul all
inter-state agreements relating to Ravi and Beas
waters. The Akali government now decided to also
de-notify the acquisition of land that was
acquired for the SYL canal which was to carry
Haryana’s share of river water.
The dispute over Ravi-Beas
water between Punjab and Haryana has been ever
since the reorganisation of the Punjab state in
1966 into Punjab and Haryana. Haryana has been
demanding an equitable share of the water.
Haryana had claimed a share of 4.8 MAF of water
out of the total 7.2 MAF. But the Punjab
government had not agree to this. In 1976 Centre
intervened and passed an order allocating 3.5
MAF of surplus Ravi-Beas water to Haryana. It
was then that the decision to construct the SYL
canal to carry Haryana’s share of water was
made.
The 212 km SYL canal-121 Km
in Punjab and 91 km in Haryana was planned.
Haryana completed construction of the canal way
back in 1980 and spent Rs 250 crore, including
its part of the canal on which it spent Rs 55.81
crore. Punjab delayed construction of the canal
in its part. Both Haryana and Punjab filed
separate petitions in the Supreme Court in 1979.
In 1981 Punjab, Haryana and
Rajasthan signed a tripartite agreement. On
paper the total available water in the Ravi-Beas
river increased from the existing 15.85 MAF to
17.7 MAF. The agreement allowed Punjab to use
the surplus water out of Rajasthan share till
that state was able to fully utilise its share
of water. But the Akalis started protesting this
agreement which became violent soon to be termed
as 'Dharam Yudh'. Punjab plunged into chaos.
Then in 1985 prime minister Rajiv Gandhi and SAD
chief Sant Harchand Ssingh Longowal signed a
treaty called Rajiv-Longowal accord’ in New
Delhi.
It was agreed to complete
the SYL canal by August 1986. It was also
decided to set up a tribunal headed by a Supreme
Court judge to decide the claims of Punjab and
Haryana regarding their share in the remaining
water. So a tribunal under Justice Balakrishna
Eradi was constituted by the Centre for the
purpose of deciding water share. The tribunmal
submitted its report in January 1987 and
increased the share of both Punjab and Haryana,
but the Eradi award could never be notified.
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Later SAD government,
headed by Surjit Singh Barnala, started the
construction work of the canal and was nearing
completion (90 percent work was over) when it
was halted by the Punjab government as
terrorists shot dead two top engineers and more
than 30 labourers at the site. The construction
work of the canal was given to the Border Roads
Organisation (BRO) but since then no
construction took place. Later in its June 2004
order the Supreme Court directed the Punjab
government to complete the remaining portion of
the SYL canal, but the same year in July the
Punjab assembly enacted the Punjab Termination
of Agreements Act. The Centre sought the opinion
of the Supreme Court on the validity of the Act
through a Presidential Reference but the matter
is still pending in the court.
Talking to Firstpost in the
press gallery of the Punjab/Haryana Vidhan
Sabha,Sukhbir Singh Badal said if a reality
check is made of the existing waters in Punjab,
it will show that there is no surplus water it
has that it can share with other states. "How
can we give water to others when we don’t have
enough for our own farmers,"
he said.
By projecting itself as the
'saviours of Punjab waters', Akalis are trying
to win voters’ support. "Anyone can easily
understand Akali game plan. Badal has now raised
the contentious issue to divert people’s
attention from the festering drugs problem,
unemployment and other important issues in the
state. Badal’s next step will be to resign and
call for a mid-term poll in the hope of
garnering popular support of the electorate. But
the voters have understood this game plan and
will not fall in the Akali trap," said senior
Congress leader and MP Captain Amarinder Singh
while talking toFirstpost.
At the moment it may look
like a win-win situation for the Akalis. The
present political situation in Punjab is a bit
awkward for the BJP, the coalition partner. The
BJP in Punjab can neither openly support the SYL
canal issue nor oppose it. BJP is in power in
both Punjab, Haryana and the Centre. Supporting
the canal issue in Punjab will mean opposing the
rights of the people of Haryana. BJP therefore
is finding it a bit difficult to keep in good
humour people of both the states as well as the
Centre.