Thursday, February 22, 2007

Cauvery: Hard Facts not Parochialism is the panacea - Part 2

Now that the readers of this column have some historical perspective of the entire Cauvery water dispute between Karnataka and Tamil Nadu, it would make better sense to tackle the problems and advantages that Karnataka faces with the final award.

Even as the politicians and some sections of the media indulge in competitive parochialism based less on facts and more on emotions, one needs to look at this issue as objectively as possible. Now is the final award unfair to Karnataka? This is an obvious question that has been dogging the minds of all fair-minded citizens in the State and outside. Read More...

Monday, February 19, 2007

Whom can Karnataka blame in the Cauvery dispute? History! - Part 1

Is it the end of a dispute or the beginning of a fresh one? This is the question, which has been haunting one's mind, ever since the Cauvery Water Disputes Tribunal came up with its final award, nearly 17 years after its formation, earlier this week.

As the Cauvery River ebbed and flowed during the last 25 years, sometimes giving bountiful water and sometimes making people thirst for a few drops, the two States at the centre of the dispute, Tamil Nadu and Karnataka, have also reacted accordingly. Read More...

Saturday, February 10, 2007

Cauvery--News Analysis

Many positives amidst few negatives in Cauvery Order for Karnataka

Despite the strong reactions from Karnataka politicians across the spectrum to the final order of the Cauvery Water Disputes Tribunal, and the demand for its review, there are several positives which emerge out of it, apart from the few negatives.

One of the positives is that Karnataka will now be allowed to store and utilise surplus water in the basin, after it ensures the flow of 192 thousand million cubic feet (tmc ft) to Tamil Nadu. This would mean that Karnataka would have to build another reservoir at the border of the two States. The place talked about for long is Mekedatu, where Karnataka will not be able to produce power, but only store surplus water and also ensure efficient drinking water supply to Bangalore and its neighbouring towns. Read More...

A Multi-dimensional mess in Karnataka

The fading winter of 2006 was action-filled in the nation's capital. After more than a year and half of dull politics on the Karnataka front, suddenly it all came alive on Feb.1 morning, when the BJP leader Venkaiah Naidu called a press conference. The air was thick with rumours and speculations about the possibility of BJP forming a government with a breakaway group of the Janata Dal(S) lead by its chief, H.D.Deve Gowda's son, H.D.Kumaraswamy.

The press conference was arranged to present the younger Gowda to the media and announce triumphantly the formation of the first BJP government in the south of India. But that was not to be. After hectic phone calls and confabulations between the BJP leaders including B.S.Yediyurappa, Naidu, and Ananth Kumar, among others, it was decided that the only excitement that the journalists could be dished out that day was the impressive spread of dishes on the lawns.Read More...

Friday, February 2, 2007

What it takes to be a superior nation than America in 2050

The other day as the nation was celebrating its 57th Republic Day, a newspaper headline the previous day kept playing on the mind. This was about India overtaking United States by the year 2050.

Watching two kids at the birthday party of the four-year-old, one could not help but think about where these kids, then in their late middle age, would be and what it would mean for them to be part of a country which would be more powerful than the United States of America.
Read More...