Bangalore/New Delhi: Karnataka yesterday stopped releasing Cauvery river water to Tamil Nadu, hours after the state informed the Supreme Court that it was in no position to continue the water flow from Monday night, a senior official said.
The five crest gates of Krishanaraja Sagar (KRS) reservoir in Mandya, about 80km from here, through which Cauvery water was being released to Tamil Nadu have been shut, the reservoir’s chief executive engineer Vijayakumar told reporters in Mandya.
Hundreds of farmers gathered at the reservoir to try to prevent water release raised slogans welcoming the stoppage when Janata Dal-Secular legislator C S Puttaraju, who had led them, confirmed that water flow had stopped.
Earlier yesterday, Karnataka Law Minister S Suresh Kumar told reporters in New Delhi that senior counsel Fali Nariman representing the state had informed the Supreme Court that the state was in no position to release the water from Monday night.
There was no comment from the court on this submission nor did Tamil Nadu advocates raise objection to it, he said.
The submission was made when the Supreme Court was hearing Karnataka’s plea to immediately allow the state to stop water release to Tamil Nadu.
Karnataka moved the court as it had on September 28 pulled it up for not obeying the September 19 ruling of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh as head of Cauvery River Authority (CRA) that it should release 9,000 cusecs of water to Tamil Nadu from September 20 to October 15.
Karnataka began releasing water on September 29 which had led to daily protests in Bangalore and Cauvery basin districts of Mandya, Mysore and Chamarajanagar - 80km, 130km and about 200km respectively from Bangalore.
Karnataka had also been pleading with the prime minister to review and stay his ruling.
The Cauvery water row returned to the prime minister’s court yesterday with the Supreme Court saying that he can decide on Karnataka’s plea to allow it to stop water release to Tamil Nadu immediately.
The Supreme Court bench of Justice D K Jain and Justice Madan B Lokur also clarified that their September 28 order “shall not in anyway be an impediment in the way of chairman CRA to take decision on review application by the Karnataka government”.
Soon after the clarification, Chief Minister Jagadish Shettar announced in New Delhi that the state would file another appeal to the CRA to withdraw the September 19 order.
Earlier in the day, a delegation of central ministers from Karnataka, External Affairs Minister S M Krishna, who hails from Mandya, Labour Minister Mallikarjun Kharge and Minister of State for Railways K H Muniyappa met Manmohan Singh and urged him to immediately review his September 19 ruling.
Agencies