Key Points

The Union Ministry of Home Affairs has stepped into the escalating water sharing conflict between Punjab and Haryana. Home Secretary Govind Mohan convened an urgent meeting to address Haryana's water requirements by directing the Bhakra Beas Management Board to release additional water. Punjab's Chief Minister Bhagwant Mann has strongly opposed the move, claiming the state has no surplus water to share. The inter-state tensions highlight the critical water resource challenges facing northern Indian states.

Key Points: MHA Intervenes in Punjab-Haryana Water Dispute Amid Crisis

  • Home Secretary Govind Mohan chairs critical water allocation meeting
  • BBMB to implement immediate water release plan
  • Punjab and Haryana locked in water sharing dispute
  • All-party meeting in Punjab unanimously opposes extra water allocation
2 min read

MHA directs Bhakra Board to release extra water to Haryana

Home Ministry directs BBMB to release 4,500 cusecs extra water to Haryana, sparking inter-state water sharing tensions

"Punjab has no surplus water to share - Bhagwant Mann, Punjab CM"

New Delhi, May 2

The Union Ministry of Home Affairs on Friday sprang into action to prevent Haryana taps from running dry and directed Bhakra Beas Management Board (BBMB) to work out the modalities of implementing the release of extra 4500 cusecs of water to the state.

Home Secretary Govind Mohan chaired a meeting and discussed implementation of measures to ensure release of water to the state to meet its needs for the next eight days.

It was decided that the Bhakra Beas Management Board (BBMB) will immediately convene a meeting to work out the modalities of implementing the release of extra 4500 cusecs of water to Haryana.

The meeting was attended by senior officers of Government of India, the partner states of BBMB - Punjab, Rajasthan and Haryana.

It was advised to carry out the decision of BBMB to release 4,500 cusecs of extra water from Bhakra Dams to Haryana for next eight days to meet their urgent water requirements.

It was also agreed that during the filling period of Dams, BBMB will provide this excess water to Punjab to fulfil their additional requirements.

Earlier in Chandigarh, Punjab Chief Minister Bhagwant Mann chaired an all-party meeting which unanimously decided that the state itself has no surplus water. The meeting members also decided to meet either Prime Minister Narendra Modi or Union Home Minister Amit Shah, to apprise them of the situation.

After the all-party meeting, leaders of prominent parties expressed solidarity with the AAP government’s refusal to share extra water with Haryana.

Chief Minister Mann told the media that all the political parties, rising above their ideology, suggested to the state government that it must save every drop of the water which is the state’s lifeline.

CM Mann said Haryana, which is already receiving 4,700 cusecs against its allocated 1,700 cusecs, is now set to benefit from additional theft of Punjab’s rightful share.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rajesh K.
Good decision by MHA! Water is a basic necessity and Haryana farmers shouldn't suffer. But Punjab's concerns are valid too - hope BBMB finds a balanced solution. Jai Jawan Jai Kisan! 🇮🇳
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Priya M.
Why is this becoming a political issue? Water management should be based on technical needs, not party politics. All states must cooperate for national interest.
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Amit S.
As someone from Haryana, I'm relieved but concerned about long-term solutions. We can't keep having these water wars every summer. Need better water conservation policies!
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Sunita R.
The way Punjab politicians are reacting shows complete lack of federal spirit. Water is national resource, not state property. Centre did right by intervening. 👍
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Vikram J.
Both states need to stop water-intensive crops like paddy. The real solution lies in crop diversification and better irrigation methods. This fighting won't solve anything in long run.
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Neha T.
Interesting how all Punjab parties united on this issue! But CM Mann's language about "water theft" is unfortunate. We need mature dialogue, not accusations between brother states.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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