SUTLEJ-YAMUNA
CANAL
PUNJAB
ACT TERMINATING WATER SHARING WITH OTHER STATES UNCONSTITUTIONAL – SUPREME
COURT
A
Constitution Bench of Supreme Court of India Today unanimously held that Punjab
Termination of Agreement Act, 2004 which terminated the Sutlej-Yamuna Link
(SYL) canal water sharing agreement with Haryana and other neighbouring states
is unconstitutional.
The
Supreme Court was pronouncing its verdict on the presidential reference of 2004
on the controversy relating to sharing of water from the Sutlej-Yamuna Link
(SYL) canal by states including Punjab and Haryana.
The
Bench comprising of Justices Anil R Dave, Pinaki Chandra Ghose, Shiva Kirti
Singh, Adarsh Kumar Goel and Amitava Roy
held that Punjab Act cannot be said to be in accordance with the provisions of
the Constitution of India and by virtue of the said Act the State of Punjab
cannot nullify the judgment and decree and terminate the Agreement dated 31st
December, 1981.
It
is pertinent to note that the water dispute, which the State of Punjab and
State of Haryana had, had been referred to the Tribunal as per the provisions
of Section 14 of the Inter State Water Disputes Act, 1956. After considering
the relevant provisions, even with regard to Section 78 of the Punjab
Reorganization Act, 1966, the Tribunal had taken a judicial decision and the
said decision is also sought to be disturbed by virtue of enactment of the
Punjab Act. The Agreement dated 31st December, 1981 is about sharing of waters
of Ravi and Beas rivers. The said Agreement could not have been unilaterally
terminated by one of the parties to the Agreement by exercising its legislative
power and if any party or any State does so, looking at the law laid down by
this Court in the case of State of Tamil Nadu, such unilateral action of a
particular State has to be declared contrary to the Constitution of India as
well as the provisions of the Inter State Water Disputes Act, 1956.
“
It is also observed that once a conclusion is arrived at to the effect that one
State, which is a party to the litigation or an Agreement, cannot unilaterally
terminate the Agreement or nullify the decree of the highest Court of the
country, the State of Punjab cannot discharge itself from its obligation which
arises from the judgment and decree dated 15th January, 2002 and the judgment
and order dated 4th January, 2004 of the apex Court.
The
apex court had been asked to decide on the validity of the Punjab Termination
of Agreement Act, 2004 as per which then chief minister Captain Amarinder Singh
terminated the contracts for water sharing with the neighboring states-
Rajasthan, Himachal Pradesh, Delhi and Jammu and Kashmir.
The
bench headed by justice AR Dave, who is demitting office on November 18 had
reserved the verdict on May 12 after the Centre maintained its earlier stand of
2004, that the states concerned should settle their disputes on the matter by
themselves.
The
Centre had said it was not taking sides and was maintaining a neutral stand in
the matter in which the court has recorded the stand of other states —
Rajasthan, Himachal Pradesh, Delhi and Jammu and Kashmir.
During
the hearing of the case –on March 21 this year — Punjab assembly passed a law
(Punjab SYL Canal ( Rehabilitation and Re-Visiting of Proprietary Rights) Bill
2016 to return the land acquired on its side for the construction of SYL canal.
The Haryana government then approached the apex court which directed the status
quo to maintained.
PUNJAB
SOUGHT FRESH TRIBUNAL
Punjab
has earlier said the apex court was not bound to answer the presidential
reference made at the instance of the Centre which had no power to resolve the
dispute.
Appearing
for Punjab, senior advocate Ram Jethmalani said the apex court was not bound to
answer the Presidential reference on the validity of the Punjab Termination of
Agreements, 2004.
“Though it is a Presidential reference, it had
been done at the instance of the Centre which had no power to decide the water
dispute. The reference had been made under Article 143 (1) of the Constitution
which clearly stated that the Supreme Court ‘may’ answer it. This was quite
contrary to references made under Article 143(2) which shall be answerable by
the Supreme Court,”
The
Parkash Singh Badal government has submitted that a fresh tribunal be set up to
resolve all disputes with other states including Haryana on all aspects, which
will also cover the riparian rights and the dwindling flow of water. It had
said a fresh tribunal was sought in 2003, about 18 months before the 2004 law
that annulled all inter-state pacts, to review the 1981 Longowal Accord on
river water-sharing in view of depleting flow and other changed circumstances.
The
water-sharing agreement was among Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan, Himachal Pradesh,
Delhi and Jammu and Kashmir.
BRIEF
HISTORY OF CASE
Ø Satluj
Yamuna link is a canal that is built between river Sutlej and Yamuna to provide
water for the farmers of Haryana from
the Punjab side. It is about 122 km long and total length is about 495 km which
includes the sub-canals. Then prime minister Indira Gandhi laid the foundation
when Darbara Singh was the chief minister of Punjab.
Ø In
Jan 29, 1955 Punjab, PEPSU, Rajasthan, Kashmir sign agreement for water
utilisation of Ravi and Beas.
Ø In
September 1960, India and Pakistan agrees on sharing of water of Satlej , Ravi
and Beas and thus signs Indus water treaty.
Ø In
1966, Haryana was carved out of Punjab and in 1971, Centre’s high level panel
recommends to share Punjab’s water with Haryana and proposes providing 3,78 MAF
to Haryana and 3.07 to Punjab.
Ø After
few years , Center issues notifications to build Sutlej-Yamuna link canal (SYL)
to be constructed which was earlier proposed by Haryana. Haryana constructed
the canal on their part but Punjab was not ready to construct it .Despite the
pressure from the central government and Haryana , construction did not began
as it was against the interests of Punjab. In 1985, Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi
and Akali Dal president Sant Harchand Singh Longowal signed “Settlement
Accord”.
Ø Construction
began but it was slow and delayed frequently and later there were regular
orders from Water Tribunal to to complete canal construction expeditiously.
Ø This
mater heated up in 2004 when then chief minister Captain Amarinder Singh
terminated the contracts for water sharing with the neighboring states .
Ø On
21st March 2016, the Punjab Assembly passed the Punjab SYL Canal
(Rehabilitation and Re-vesting of Proprietary Rights) Bill 2016, seeking to
return land acquired for the canal’s construction to the original owners free
of cost.
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