I do not think it is a question of realising that proposed links with NE are
harebrained....... It is more in the vein of what Mishra ji wrote, where is
the need to ask anyone from the NE. Otherwise the whole scheme is so
harebrained........

ht
----- Original Message -----
From: Chan Mahanta <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>;
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, October 15, 2003 7:49 PM
Subject: From thev Assam Tribune


> Even I am a bit surprised by the NE's exclusion from this 'summit', mainly
> because I thought people like Suresh Prabhu and his masters would have
> become a tad bit more sensitized to the NE's concerns by now. I was ready
> to trust Prabhu's public assurances that nothing would be done about
> diverting Assam waters without the approval of its people.
>
> It merely underscores Delhi's imperial attitudes.
>
> The other explanation could be, that like I explained earlier, the
> Brahmaputra and /or Manas damming and linking with the Kosi in Bihar is
> such a harebrained propsal, that finally it is beginning to sink in, and
> therefore the non-invitation of the NE to the 'summit'. That could
actually
> be a good sign.
>
>
> cm
>
>
>
>
> River-linking meet sans NE representative
> By A Staff Reporter
>  GUWAHATI, Oct 14 - A high-level daylong seminar on inter-linking of
rivers
> billed as "First National Media Summit on Interlinking of Rivers:
Prospects
> and Challenges" was held at New Delhi today where not a single
> representative from this land of the mighty Brahmaputra river was invited.
> The Union Ministry of Water Resources sponsored the seminar at HUDCO
Bhawan
> at Habitat Centre in the national capital, which was organised by
> Association of Integrated Social Transformation and Chronicle Society of
> India for Education and Academic Research, amongst others.
>
>  The All Assam Students Union (AASU) which has taken a strong stand
against
> the proposed river-linking project of the Government of India as the
> project aims at exploiting the huge pool of water resources of Brahmaputra
> at the expense of Assam, has alleged that it was seminar organised by the
> Government of India engaging some NGOs.
>
>  The AASU Adviser Samujjal Bhattacharyya told this newspaper that as the
> organisers failed to invite a single representative from Assam or the
> entire North East to this high-level seminar, it once again exposed the
> indifferent attitude of the BJP-led Government at the Centre towards North
> East. He said as 50 per cent of the total pool of water resources in the
> country was from the Brahmaputra and the Ganges, it was outrageous to
learn
> that not a single person was invited to the seminar from Assam or the
North
> East. "It once again exposed the design of the Centre to exploit the water
> resources of Brahmaputra river without caring to consider the views of the
> people of the State or the region. For the Centre the eastern boundary of
> the country still ends at Kolkata and the North-east is continued to be
> treated as a colony for the purpose of exploiting its natural resources.
>
>  The AASU leader who is now in New Delhi to attend the next round of
> discussion of the tripartite sub-committee on Assam Accord, informed that
> the seminar was attended by a battery of prominent personalities and
> experts including several BJP leaders   and the Chairman of the Government
> of India task force on the rivers interlinking project, Suresh Prabhu.
>
>
>


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