Rivers of dispute

once more, there is talk of nationalising the country's rivers and river basins. And this time around, the idea came from the Supreme Court. During the hearing over the sharing of the river waters, the apex court asked solicitor general Harish Salve if it was possible to bring rivers under the central list, saying this problem would happen in every river.

Disputes over sharing of river waters are by now a depressingly familiar story in India. As water-intensive agriculture forms, power needs and wasteful urban consumption put pressure on available river water, fights are breaking out everywhere. Whether it is Karnataka and Tamil Nadu over Cauvery, Karnataka, Maharashtra and Andhra Pradesh over Krishna, Karnataka and Goa over Madei or Punjab and Haryana over Satluj, practically every river in the sub-continent has become a contested domain.

But bringing rivers and river basins under the central ambit is no solution as this would further alienate the users. At a time when decentralisation process is in motion in every sector, central control of river waters would be, to say the least, absurd and regressive. What is required is greater community involvement over the water usage.

As we have said time and again, politicians will never resolve the issue