No damming of Brahmaputra by China, says Arunachal CM

20 Oct 2009

1

Guwahati: State authorities of the north-eastern Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh have been informed by the Indian prime minister that China has formally clarified that it is not building a dam on its side of the Brahmaputra river. This clarification was passed on by the prime minister to a delegation of state legislators in the course of a meeting in New Delhi on Monday.

According to Arunachal Pradesh chief minister Dorjee Khandu, who headed the delegation, "The prime minister assured us that there was no dam being constructed over the Brahmaputra by China. In fact, Beijing had formally communicated this to the Indian government."

The clarification comes amidst a storm of media reports that China may be initiating plans to construct a $167 million hydro-power plant in Zangmu, 140 km southeast of Tibet's capital Lhasa. Reports also suggest that water from Tibet may diverted to its parched north-west and north-east territories, including the Gobi desert.

"We are happy with the prime minister's assurance," Khandu said.

Fears were expressed recently that any water diversion or damming activities on the Brahmaputra in Tibet could result in a natural disaster for down-stream states in the region, such as India and Bangladesh.

China and India have been unofficially engaged in a war of words, mainly through the media over claims and counter-claims over vast tracts of territory in the western sectors of Ladakh, central sectors of Uttaranchal and the eastern sector of Arunachal Pradesh.

Beijing has been especially incensed over the upcoming visit of Tibetan spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, to the Tawang monastery in Arunachal Pradesh. The Dalai Lama is an acknowledged leader, both spiritual and temporal, of the Tibetan people and heads a government in exile in India.

Latest articles

Anthropic’s revenue run-rate doubles in India in four months as Claude adoption surges

Anthropic’s revenue run-rate doubles in India in four months as Claude adoption surges

Alibaba launches Qwen3.5 as competition heats up in the 'agentic AI' race

Alibaba launches Qwen3.5 as competition heats up in the 'agentic AI' race

Big Tech loses billions as AI spending concerns weigh on valuations

Big Tech loses billions as AI spending concerns weigh on valuations

The analog antidote: why Americans are trading algorithms for physical media

The analog antidote: why Americans are trading algorithms for physical media

UK weighs faster defence spending hike toward 3% as security pressures mount

UK weighs faster defence spending hike toward 3% as security pressures mount

China opens market to 53 African nations in zero-tariff pivot

China opens market to 53 African nations in zero-tariff pivot

Modi’s rooftop solar push slows as lenders and states drag feet

Modi’s rooftop solar push slows as lenders and states drag feet

India hosts global AI summit as tech leaders gather in Delhi amid investment push

India hosts global AI summit as tech leaders gather in Delhi amid investment push

OpenClaw founder Peter Steinberger joins OpenAI as personal-agent project moves to foundation

OpenClaw founder Peter Steinberger joins OpenAI as personal-agent project moves to foundation