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Dams need to be built under any circumstances: CJP

By Agencies
June 28, 2018

ISLAMABAD: Chief Justice of Pakistan (CJP) Justice Mian Saqib Nisar on Wednesday, while hearing the Kalabagh Dam case, said dams would have to be built under any circumstances and other options need to be explored if the Kalabagh Dam was controversial.

A three-member bench of the apex court, chaired by Justice Saqib Nisar, was hearing the petition filed by Barrister Zafarullah Khan, who had requested a referendum for the construction of the Kalabagh Dam.

Judicial adviser, former chairman Wapda Engineer Shamsul Mulk and lawyer Aitzaz Ahsan, also serving as amicus curiae on the case, were present in the court. As the hearing was underway, the petitioner remarked that all the four provinces had agreed on the construction of Kalabagh Dam, to which the chief justice responded that the issue was not so simple.

The former Wapda chief informed the apex court that 46,000 dams had been constructed worldwide. "Are other countries fools to be constructing dams?" he said.

China has constructed 22,000 dams, Shamsul Mulk told the court. He further said that India had constructed 4,500 dams.

"I have met every opponent of the Kalabagh Dam and all of them have accepted my stance on the matter," Mulk said. He observed that opponents of the dam say they don't trust Punjab.

The engineer informed the court that water stored in the Tarbela Dam is distributed to the provinces through a devised formula, with Khyber Pakhtunkhwa receiving four percent of the water. Sindh, Balochistan, and Punjab receive 70 percent, six percent, and 20 percent of Tarebela's water respectively.

Mulk further stated that he had given a briefing on the dam to the KP government and the Awami National Party (ANP), whose influence lies in the Pashtun-dominated areas in and around the province. "A senior member of ANP told me that he would convince party president Asfandyar Wali Khan for the construction of the dam," he told the court.

The chief justice asked if Pakistan's survival without water was possible. "What will be Pakistan's water situation after five years if dams are not constructed?" he said.

To Justice Saqib Nisar's inquiry, Mulk responded that 86 percent of the water in rivers comes in the form of floods. The chief justice then asked about the measures that should be taken to solve the country's water issue. He also observed that fear should not be evoked in the citizens of Pakistan, and Quetta in particular.

The top judge observed that construction of dams was imperative for the country's survival. Pointing towards national unity, he said all of the four brothers (provinces) should come together and make sacrifices for the construction of dams. "Farmers will be indebted if agricultural land is left fertile," he said.

Moreover, Justice Saqib Nisar remarked that the nation needs Mulk’s services.

"We must work on an urgent and emergency basis and bring together people so they can give their suggestions," the chief justice said. "Everyone should unite to resolve the issue," he said.

Aitzaz Ahsan remarked that talks should be held with the opponents of the dam. To this, the chief justice responded that dams which are not controversial should be prioritised.

Questioning the political governments’ efforts to construct dams in the past 10 years, Justice Saqib Nisar remarked that nothing had been done in that regard.

"Come what may, dams must be constructed. I want to know where can the dams be constructed? I want to know the issue's solution," the chief justice said, adding that the apex court would not let the matter go till it was resolved.

The top judge observed that a team of experts needs to be constituted. Imtiaz Qazalbash, former Wapda chief engineer, responded that multiple teams, not one, need to be formed for the issue.

Imtiaz further said that dams were not constructed due to corruption, and instead thermal power stations were installed. "The Nawaz Sharif-led government set up thermal plants on three hundred percent higher prices," he alleged.