Drought-hit Indian farmers protest against sharing of river water
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[September 29, 2023]
By Chandini Monnappa and Navamya Ganesh Acharya
BENGALURU (Reuters) -Farmers battling drought in India's southern state
of Karnataka began a day-long strike on Friday to protest against the
sharing of water from a river that also runs through the neighboring
state of Tamil Nadu.
Police urged calm with all schools and public places staying shut, as
thousands of farmers and trade union members held rallies after protests
began this week in the tech hub of Bengaluru, against an order from the
Supreme Court to share the waters.
"We will not let water from our river enter into the other state at a
time when our farmlands are barren," said T. Ramanujan, the leader of a
farmers' union in Karnataka.
With millions of farmers dependent on the river Cauvery for irrigation
in both states, the dispute over sharing its waters has been one of the
long-standing legal battles.
In August the Tamil Nadu government approached the Supreme Court,
requesting its intervention, while Karnataka argued that it had
inadequate water in its reservoirs due to low rainfall.
Street protests began this week after the court directed Karnataka to
release 5,000 cusecs of river water to Tamil Nadu for 15 days this
month. A cusec is a volume equivalent to one cubic foot, or 28 cubic
liters, per second.
Protesters in Bengaluru chanted "ours, ours, Cauvery is ours," slogans
and called for police and government officials to join the protest
Scores of people and some children from distressed districts carried
placards with signs that said "We will give our blood but not water."
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Demonstrators hold placards next to a banner as they attend a
protest against the sharing of Cauvery river water with neighbouring
Tamil Nadu state, in Bengaluru, India, September 26, 2023. The
banner and placards read: "Protest against the unscientific decision
taken by authorities on Kaveri", "Kannada land's life-giving river,
this Kaveri" and "Kaveri is ours". REUTERS/Dhanya Skariachan/File
Photo
The government of Tamil Nadu says Karnataka had failed to manage the
river and it must limit over-consumption of the shared resource.
"I have sown seeds but the ground is dry due to scanty rainfall and
now we have shortage of supply from Cauvery river," said S. Kumar, a
48-year-old farmer in the state's district of Pudukkottai. "Small
farmers are struggling this year."
The Cauvery originates in the Karnataka region of Talakaveri and
flows through Tamil Nadu before entering the Bay of Bengal.
Officials at an industry body in Karnataka said over 60% of
manufacturing plants adhered to the call for strike, a decision that
cost them about four billion Indian rupees (over $48 million).
"Nevertheless, we readily accept our losses because we accept that
water is crucial for both sustaining life and food production," said
Ramesh Chandra Lahoti, President at Federation of Karnataka Chambers
of Commerce and Industry.
($1=83.0762 Indian rupees)
(Additional reporting by VarunVyas Hebbalalu, Pravin Paramasivam;
Writing by Rupam Jain; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)
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