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What Is Happening to the Siang River in Arunachal Pradesh?

What Is Happening to the Siang River in Arunachal Pradesh?

The usually clear Siang is brown and dangerous this winter. Credit: H.K.Roy/thethirdpole.net

With high turbidity and iron levels in the usually crystal-clear Siang, the people of Arunachal Pradesh are facing a crisis as fish die and the river seems too polluted to use.

The usually clear Siang is brown and dangerous this winter. Credit: H.K.Roy/thethirdpole.net
The usually clear Siang is brown and dangerous this winter. Credit: H.K.Roy/thethirdpole.net

November-December is the peak rafting season on northern India’s Siang, but this year it is not the grade IV rapids that are scaring away enthusiasts – it’s the extreme muddiness of the river.

“We have not been able to raft at Siang. It is scary to put the rafts in,” said Oken Tayeng of Abor Country Travels, which organises rafting expeditions. All rafting activities have been put on halt, he says.

Up to ten inches of sediment has accumulated on some stretches of the riverbed and fishes have been dying, while the State Water Quality Testing Laboratory (SWQTL) has declared the water is unfit for human consumption; the Nephelometric Turbidity Unit (NTU) content of the water sample was 482, while the iron content was recorded at 1.65 mg/litre – beyond permissible limits. A report from Arunachal Pradesh’s Public Health Engineering Department was shared exclusively with thethirdpole.net.

An official of the Upper Siang district administration said that initially, they thought the river was muddy due to the rain. But even after the rains stopped, the colour did not change. The water was muddy even as it entered Indian territory in Gelling in Upper Siang.

If the water does not clear up, it will severely impact agriculture production in the area, says a district administrator of the neighbouring Siang district. Siang Valley is known as one of the rice bowls of the state and several villages are directly dependent on the river.

“We have not been able to fish at all because the water is too muddy and there are no fish,” says Ajeet Morang.

Courtesy: thethirdpole.net

Pasighat, the largest town along the river, has seen dead fish wash up on the banks since mid-November. Although people in large stretches are not directly dependent on the main Siang River, the effects are already being seen in Assam and Arunachal in aquatic life loss and livelihood issues. Vijay Taram of the f=Forum for Siang Dialogue says that the central government should do a rigorous study to find out the cause.

The Siang river has not been unpredictable, unlike other rivers. Therefore the sudden change in colour – as well as the receding water level – has become a cause of concern and led to much speculation. People living along the Siang remember the June 2000 floods, when the river had turned muddy throwing up various dead species – but the river cleared up within a week.

The difference between the muddy and clean part of the river, near Pasighat, is striking. Credit: Toge Rina
The difference between the muddy and clean part of the river, near Pasighat, is striking. Credit: Toge Rina

Older people in the community say that after the 1950 earthquake, the same had happened but the river soon cleared up then too. The muddy water might be caused by a similar reason. There was a strong earthquake – estimated to be between 6.4 and 6.9 on the Richter scale – on November 17 in Nyingchi, just upstream of Arunachal Pradesh in the Tibetan region. This was also mentioned by Arjun Ram Meghwal, Union minister of state for water resources, river development and Ganga rejuvenation, as a possible reason.

Given the limited information sharing across the India-China border, though, there has been enormous suspicion by Indian politicians of alleged Chinese activities that may have led to the polluting of the river.

The chief minister of Arunachal Pradesh, Pema Khandu, asked the central government to take up the matter with Beijing after inspecting the river in Yingkiong, near the Indo-China border. Earlier the Lok Sabha MP from Arunachal Pradesh, Ninong Ering, had written a letter to the Indian prime minister, noting that the river changing its colour was an unusual phenomenon in the winter months.

Tongam Rina is the associate editor of The Arunachal Times.

This article was originally published by thethirdpole.net. You can read the original here.

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