SYL canal issue: Won’t share a single drop of additional water, says Mann

Punjab CM’s remark comes a day after SC asks Centre to survey the portion of land in Punjab that was allocated for the construction of a part of the SYL canal

Update: 2023-10-05 08:05 GMT
Mann made the statement in a post on X following an emergency meeting of the cabinet at his residence. File photo

Punjab Chief Minister Bhagwant Mann on Thursday (October 5) said not even a single drop of additional water will be shared with any other state at any cost.

Mann made the statement in a post on X following an emergency meeting of the cabinet at his residence.

He also informed that the state cabinet has approved the name of Gurminder Singh for the advocate general's (AG) post.

Though no official agenda of the meeting was released, the council of ministers discussed the Sutlej-Yamuna-Link (SYL) canal issue.

“Also, the SYL issue was discussed at the meeting ... not even a single drop of additional water will be shared with any other state at any cost ... convening the monsoon session (of the state Assembly) soon was also discussed ... approval to several pro-people decisions was given,” he posted on X.

The meeting came a day after the Supreme Court asked the Centre to survey the portion of land in Punjab that was allocated for the construction of a part of the SYL canal.

All political parties in Punjab asserted on Wednesday that the state does not have a single drop of additional water to share with any other state.

However, political parties in Haryana welcomed the apex court's directions, saying the people of the state have been waiting to get SYL water for years.

During the hearing in the matter on Wednesday, the top court asked the Centre to survey the portion of land in Punjab that was allocated for the construction of a part of the SYL canal and make an estimate of the extent of construction carried out there.

A bench headed by Justice Sanjay Kishan Kaul also asked the Centre to actively pursue the mediation process in order to resolve the festering dispute between Punjab and Haryana over the construction of the canal.

The SYL canal was conceptualised for effective allocation of water from the Ravi and Beas rivers. The project envisaged a 214-km canal, of which a 122-km stretch was to be constructed in Punjab and the remaining 92 km in Haryana.

Haryana has completed the project in its territory but Punjab, which launched the construction work in 1982, shelved it subsequently.

Both the states have been locked in a battle over river water after Haryana was carved out of Punjab in 1966.

(With inputs from agencies)


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