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“If the authority, in future, decides to ask Karnataka to release water once in 10 days in a month, then one can understand our condition. And if it decides which crops to be raised, I mean, it will not in the interest of the people of Karnataka,” he said.
Kumaraswamy, who met Modi in New Delhi yesterday said, it was “impractical and implausible” to implement these directions.
Karnataka should have a say over the timing of the release of the water, he said at a meet-the-press programme organised by the Press Club of Bangalore and the Bangalore Reporters Guild.
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He said the Water Resources Ministry has responded positively to his request of changing two to three clauses on the constitution of the Authority before it begins operating. Kumaraswamy also said he would send names of its nominees for the Authority though not before the technical issues raised by him are addressed.
“However, Karnataka will abide by the Supreme Court order relating to the sharing of Cauvery water with Tamil Nadu, Kerala and Puducherry,” he said. Kumaraswamy also sought Parliament approval for the formation of the Authority.
In a June 1 gazette notification, the Water Resources Ministry said it has framed a scheme constituting the Authority and the Cauvery Water Regulation Committee (CWRC) to give effect to the decision of the Cauvery Water Disputes Tribunal as modified by the Supreme Court order.
Karnataka has been opposing any move to form the Authority and had instead suggested the formation of Cauvery Decision Implementation Committee.