Water to Katas Raj to be restored at all costs: CJ

By Monitoring Report
November 24, 2017
ISLAMABAD: Supreme Court Chief Justice Saqib Nisar said on Thursday that water to the Katas Raj temple will be restored even if 10 wells have to be closed.
He lambasted the government for its inability to safeguard one of the Hindu minority’s most revered places of worship, the Katas Raj Temple in Chakwal, where the sacred pond is drying up.
The chief justice of Pakistan described Katas Raj as a national heritage site that must be protected and directed authorities in the Punjab to form a committee to probe the issue.
The Supreme Court was hearing a suo moto case it had taken up on the basis of media reports that the pond atKatas Raj was drying up because the nearby cement factories are drawing large amounts of groundwater through a number of wells.
Almost every home in Katas Waulah and Choa Saidan Shah also draws water through bore wells in the absence of a proper water supply network. The unchecked plantation of eucalyptus saplings in the region has compounded the problem, some reports suggested.
“This temple is not just a place of cultural significance for the Hindu community, but also a part of our national heritage,” Nisar observed. “I want a solution to this problem.” The chief justice ordered authorities to fill the pond within a week. “The pond should be filled in a week even if water has to be carried in water-skins to fill it,” he said.
The Punjab government and a district coordination officer submitted reports on the issue to the court, and the additional advocate general made important disclosures about a cement factory operating in the area, saying its water usage is greater than that of the entire population of Chakwal city.
Attorney General Ashtar Ausaf incurred the ire of the chief justice as he was not present when the court began hearing into the matter. Once Ausaf arrived in the court, CJP Nisar stressed the importance of protecting the rights of the minorities.
Ausaf was

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directed to form a committee to assess the matter and to assist the panel. The chief justice suggested that a citizen of Chakwal who often raises his voice on the issue should be included in the committee.
“Our goal is to find a solution to the matter of how water can be provided,” Nisar said. “If we need to close down 10 tube wells or halt the water consumption to the factories, we will do it.”
He added it was regrettable that cement factories appeared to have cut away more than half the mountains in the area. The court, he said, is not against setting up of factories “but they should be located in places that do not cause inconvenience to ordinary citizens”. He added: “It is unacceptable to live without access to clean water or air.” The case was later adjourned for a week.

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