Pak puts off dam after India protest
Pak puts off dam after India protest
Pakistan Foreign Office Spokesperson denied that the postponement had anything to do with the objections raised by India recently.

Islamabad: Pakistan has for the second time put off the ground-breaking ceremony of the controversial $6.5 billion Basha dam on Indus river which was objected to by India, even as it rejected New Delhi's statement that the 'Northern Areas' where the project was being built were its "integral" part.

President Pervez Musharraf was scheduled to take part in the ceremony on Thursday but an official announcement said on Wednesday night it had been postponed "due to inclement weather". No new date was given. Officials said the President will perform the ground-breaking ceremony in the "near future."

Earlier, Musharraf planned to lay the foundation stone in the first week of last month but that was also put off.

Pakistan Foreign Office Spokesperson Tasinim Aslam, however, denied that the postponement had anything to do with the objections raised by India recently.

India has last week protested to Pakistan saying that the dam would be constructed in the Northern Areas which came under the erstwhile Jammu and Kashmir state, which was an "integral part of India by virtue of its accession to it in 1947". Also the reservoir would inundate parts of J&K.

"Not at all. The ceremony may have been postponed due to technical reasons but it has nothing to do with India's objections. In fact India has nothing to do with the construction of the dam," Aslam said.

Aslam also said that Pakistan rejected Indian claim that Gilgit-Baltistan were its integral part.

She was reacting to the March 10 statement by Indian External Affairs Ministry on Pakistani media reports about a new map being circulated on J&K depicting 'Northern Areas' as a separate entity.

"There are several resolutions of the United Nations Security Council and the United Nations Commission for India and Pakistan, regarding the State of Jammu and Kashmir being a disputed territory, the final status of which is yet to be determined," Aslam said in statement.

Pakistan had decided to build the Bhasha later renamed as Diamer-Bhasha dam last month after failing to evolve consensus to build Kalabagh dam in North West Frontier Province(NWFP,) which was firmly opposed by NWFP, Sindh and Balochistan provinces on the grounds that it would only benefit the dominant Punjab province.

JKLF leader Amanullah Khan was detained for several weeks when he held a protest rally asking for proper compensation for the locals as well as the renaming of the dam.

The dam was expected to displace over 26000 people and would generate about 3300 mw of power and supply water to NWFP, Sindh and Punjab provinces.

It was also expected to inundate about 110 km alignment of the existing Karakoram highway which connects Pakistan with China.

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