NEW DELHI:
The Supreme Court upheld the maintainability of appeals filed by Karnataka, Tamil Nadu and Kerala against the 2007 award of the Cauvery Water Dispute Tribunal (CWDT) on sharing the river water.
A three-judge bench headed by Justice Dipak Misra said that all the appeals filed by the southern states against the Tribunal’s award are maintainable, though the Centre had asserted that the apex court had
“We hold all the appeals maintainable. Interim order to continue. List the matter for further hearing on December 15,” a bench also comprising justices Amitava Roy amd A M Khanwilkar.
On October 18, the apex court had directed Karnataka to keep supplying Tamil Nadu with 2,000 cusecs of water till further orders.
The bench had also said it would first go into the issue of maintainability of appeals filed by Karnataka, Tamil Nadu and Kerala against the award of tribunal and then hear arguments on the report filed by the Supervisory Committee formed to assess the ground realities in the Cauvery basin region.
The Centre, through Attorney General Mukul Roh
atgi, had raised a preliminary objection claiming that the CWDT award amounted to a final decree in the dispute and the apex court had no jurisdiction to hear appeals against the award of the tribunal.
But the states had contended that their appeals were maintainable saying the Supreme Court had the jurisdiction to adjudicate the appeals filed by the state against the award of tribunal and that no statute can take away the appellate powers of the apex court under Article 136 of Constitution.
However, Puducherry supported the stand of the Centre that the appeals filed by Karnataka, Tamil Nadu and Kerala are not maintainable.
Earlier, Rohatgi had argued that Supreme Court had no jurisdiction to adjudicate the appeals pertaining to the dispute relating to use, distribution and control of inter-state water or river valley.
The attorney general had said as per the constitutional provisions, the inter-state water dispute tribunal is headed by a retired Supreme Court or High Court judge and its decree has a force like that of a decree of the Supreme Court and thus the apex court cannot hear the appeals against its own order.
more recommended stories
SC Expresses Shock on Madras HC Directive to Arrest Tamil Nadu ADGP JayaramNEW DELHI:The Supreme Court on Wednesday.
G7: PM Modi Calls for Strict Action Against Nations Who Promote TerrorismCANADA:Participating in the Outreach Session of.
TASMAC Probe: Madras HC Questions ED’s Powers to ‘Seal’ Premises under PMLA, Slams ‘Overreach’CHENNAI:In a strong oral observation, the.
Second Ahmedabad–London Air India Flight Cancelled Amid Technical ConcernsAHMEDABAD:Just days after the devastating crash.
Govt Debunks Reports Claiming Caste Enumeration Not Included in Census 2027NEW DELHI:The Central government has refuted.
PM Modi to Address G7 Session as India Races Ahead on Economic FrontNEW DELHI:Prime Minister Narendra Modi will.
Air India Crash Tragedy: 125 DNA Matches Confirmed, 83 Mortal Remains Handed OverGANDHINAGAR:In the aftermath of the devastating.
110 Indian Students Evacuated to Armenia, Repatriation to Delhi Scheduled TomorrowNEW DELHI:Amidst the rapidly intensifying conflict.
Global Aviation Experts Join India’s Probe into Ahmedabad Air India Plane CrashAHMEDABAD:A high-level team of international aviation.
Hong Kong-Delhi Flight Undergoing Checks After Technical Issue, Passengers Being Assisted: Air IndiaNEW DELHI:An Air India Boeing 787-8.