Indian national father Mr. Gandhi said that the world's resources were enough to serve everybody's need but not to anybody's greed, and the Indian Premier Mrs. Gandhi persuaded Bangladesh's Premier Mr. Rahman to endorse that the Ganges water was not enough for both India and Bangladesh although the Ganges founded and nourished the riparian flora and fauna from the high Himalayan Mountains to the Bay of Bengal for eons. Being a research-alert native of the hardest-hit downstream Ganges basin due to the upstream Indian water piracy from the Ganges, I felt a strong urge to explore how India was...
Indian national father Mr. Gandhi said that the world's resources were enough to serve everybody's need but not to anybody's greed, and the Indian Pre...
This volume briefs the solutions that riparian nations follow for mutual coexistence along with India's skewness on riparian water issues. It then unfolds the Indian bluff foundation for pirating downstream Ganges ecosystem's water. The Ganges fed by Indian and Nepalese streams passes through India and Bangladesh to fall into the Bay of Bengal. About 16 km away from the Indo-Bangladesh border, the seasonal Bhagirathi off-shoots from the Ganges to connect the Ganges with the southward sea-going tributary-abundant Hooghly. To set up her National Waterway No. 1, India dammed the tributaries of...
This volume briefs the solutions that riparian nations follow for mutual coexistence along with India's skewness on riparian water issues. It then unf...
Vol. 2 starts with the procrastinating marathon Indo-Pakistan and Indo-Bangladesh meetings, and the short-term water piracy treaties in between which India indefinitely pirated the Ganges water. Decades-long water shortages caused irreversible ecosystem changes in the downstream. Following Bangladesh's approach to the UNO for stopping the water piracy in the post-test-run period of the barrage, Indian press bullied Bangladesh in indecent language discussed in chapter 6. A 30-year water piracy treaty was made in 1996. India made multiple gross violations of it to such an inordinate extent that...
Vol. 2 starts with the procrastinating marathon Indo-Pakistan and Indo-Bangladesh meetings, and the short-term water piracy treaties in between which ...
Vol. 2 of the Gasping Ganges series deals with the Yamuna, its tributaries, the dams and barrages on them, and the irrigation and hydroelectric projects they support. The dams and barrages on the Yamuna section are the Tajewala, the Hathnikund, the Dakpathar the Wazirabad, the Okhla, the ITO, etc. and the canals are the Wetern Yamuna,the Eastern Yamuna, and the Agra. The Yamunas emptiness, the principal sewage disposal points and the consequences have been covered. Most of the Yamunas tributaries - the Chambal,the Kali Sindh, the Mej, the Chakan, the Kanu, the Alinia, the Parvati, the Banas,...
Vol. 2 of the Gasping Ganges series deals with the Yamuna, its tributaries, the dams and barrages on them, and the irrigation and hydroelectric projec...
The 1st chapter of the 3rd vol. of the series "The Dam-Deluged Gasping Ganges" deals with the Ganges tributaries coming down from Nepal and a few more originating in India. The 2nd chapter discusses the dams and barrages on the Teesta and the Mahananda, the water piracy from them, and the downstream people's sufferings. Also, it mentions the dams and barrages in the basins of the Brahmaputra and the Barak, the head stream of the Meghna, because they discharge into the lower course of the Ganges. The upstream water piracy causes river bed silting with the danger of devastating floods. Besides,...
The 1st chapter of the 3rd vol. of the series "The Dam-Deluged Gasping Ganges" deals with the Ganges tributaries coming down from Nepal and a few more...