The World Bank on Thursday announced that Professor Raymond Lafitte, the Neutral Expert appointed to address 'the difference' between India and Pakistan over the construction of the Baglihar Dam on the Chenab River in India, will announce his decision on February 12 in Bern, Switzerland.
Lafitte, a Swiss national, who is a civil engineer and professor at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne, under the terms of the 1960 Indus Waters Treaty, was appointed by the World Bank on May 10, 2005 to render a decision on what the it put mildly as "a difference" between the two governments regarding the Baglihar project.
According to the provisions of the treaty, the decision of Professor Lafitte on all matters within his competence is final and binding.
A major controversy erupted at the time when it was rumored that Praful Patel, vice president of the World Bank for South Asia -- a Ugandan of Indian origin -- had been appointed by the World Bank to arbitrate the dispute between India and Pakistan. Islamabad had strongly protested the appointment of Patel, alleging that someone of Indian origin will be biased against Pakistan.
At the time, Islamabad publicly denied the allegation that it had protested Patel's naming, but privately several sources confirmed to rediff.com that this was the case and that the World Bank had then moved to name an outside expert Lafitte to resolve what it called "a difference," but what was at the time brewing to become an intractable issue.
Bank officials told rediff.com that Patel, one of the most respected
Baglihar report to be binding on Pak, India
Image: The Baglihar Dam Project