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Supreme Court raps Karnataka Court on Cauvery water issue

The decade-long Cauvery water dispute was recently tabled before the Supreme Court where the distribution of waters was allocated, from Karnataka to Tamil Nadu.

The Supreme Court has ordered the Karnataka government to immediately released 4 tmc of Cauvery water to Tamil Nadu. The top court also directed the Centre to file an affidavit in the matter. The court is hearing a petition from Tamil Nadu against the Centre’s delay in following a Supreme Court order to set up the Cauvery Management Board (CMB).

The Tamil Nadu government had gone to court alleging undue delay on the part of the Centre in setting up the CMB. The Supreme Court had in February ordered the Centre to set up the body and had given it six weeks to do so. That deadline lapsed at the end of March. Political parties in Tamil Nadu have alleged that the Centre is intentionally delaying the constitution of the CMB to avoid backlash in the coming Karnataka Assembly elections.

The Central government’s top lawyer told the Supreme Court that the delay in setting up the CMB was for procedural reasons. “… the Cauvery Management Board draft has to be tabled before the Union Cabinet, and as the Prime Minister is in Karnataka for elections, the draft, therefore, has not been approved yet,” Attorney General KK Venugopal told the court.

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The SC ordered the Centre to file an affidavit informing it of the steps it has taken to set up the Cauvery Management Board. Significantly¸ it directed the Centre to file this affidavit on May 8, four days before Karnataka votes in the Assembly election.

The apex court had earlier given May 3 as the deadline for the Centre to frame the draft scheme for setting up the CMB. But on Thursday, the Centre sought more time.

The Supreme Court also directed the Karnataka government to immediately release 4 tmc of Cauvery water to Tamil Nadu. It has set May 8 as the date for the next hearing the case.

The verdict comes in the wake of massive protests in Chennai against the Centre related to the formation of the Cauvery Management Board (CMB). Earlier, the apex court had reprimanded the Centre for postponing the formation of the Cauvery Management Board and skipping the May 31 deadline to submit a draft regarding the same. The Centre had sought more time to submit a draft scheme on the Cauvery water-sharing between Karnataka and Tamil Nadu. The court had also asked the Centre to make its intention clear vis-à-vis the formation of the CMB by May 3.

The Attorney General of India, KK Venugopal, told the Supreme Court that the Centre was unable to table a draft on the Cauvery Management Board before the Union Cabinet as the Prime Minister is in Karnataka for election rallies. He also sought more time from the court, requesting it to defer the issue till the Karnataka assembly elections are over.

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