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NEW DELHI (ANI)- India is closely monitoring China’s plans to develop hydropower projects on the Brahmaputra River, ensuring its interests and those of its downstream citizens are safeguarded ...
India has strongly urged China to ensure that its upstream activities on Brahmaputra River do not adversely impact downstream states.
Coherent, not chaotic—surprising order found in Brahmaputra-Jamuna River channel migration by Rebecca Owen, Eos edited by Lisa Lock, reviewed by Robert Egan Editors' notes ...
Amid rising Indo-Pak tensions, Pakistani PM Shehbaz Sharif warns that China could weaponise the Brahmaputra's waters after India suspended the Indus Waters Treaty.
After India decisively moved away from the outdated Indus Waters Treaty, Pakistan is now spinning another manufactured threat: What if China stops the Brahmaputra's water to India?
Sarma urged for a fact-based approach to dispel fears about China's control over the Brahmaputra, stating that the river gains volume within India and does not shrink due to upstream activity.
In a befitting reply to Pakistan over the threat of China to stop Brahmaputra water to India, Assam Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma took to social media, calling Brahmaputra “a river that ...
He said Brahmaputra grows in India and does not shrink here. China contributes only ~30-35 per cent of the river’s total flow, but the rest of ~60-65 per cent is generated in India.
Assam's Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma refuted Pakistan's claims about China potentially weaponizing the Brahmaputra River. Sarma clarified that the Brahmaputra is primarily fed by Indian ...
Himanta Sarma said that Pakistan, which has long benefited from the Indus Waters Treaty, is now "panicking" as India reclaims its rightful water sovereignty.
Himanta Sarma said that Pakistan, which has long benefited from the Indus Waters Treaty, is now "panicking" as India reclaims its rightful water sovereignty.