HomeNewsEnvironmentMahadayi water sharing case: Why Goans are forming a 7km human chain along the river today

Mahadayi water sharing case: Why Goans are forming a 7km human chain along the river today

On May 20, thousands of Goans will form a human prayer chain along the Mandovi (Mhadei) river to spread awareness about the protection of the river, the lifeline of Goa’s ecosystem,

May 20, 2023 / 08:16 IST
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Crossing the Mandovi river in a ferry. The human-chain initiative is part of Goa's Mhadei Amchi Mai festival, organized in the run-up to the Supreme Court's July hearing in the river water-sharing dispute between Goa and Karnataka. (Photo by Frederick Noronha via Wikimedia Commons 4.0)
Crossing the Mandovi river in a ferry. The human-chain initiative is part of Goa's Mhadei Amchi Mai festival, organized in the run-up to the Supreme Court's July hearing in the river water-sharing dispute between Goa and Karnataka. (Photo by Frederick Noronha via Wikimedia Commons 4.0)

On May 20, thousands of Goans will form a human prayer chain along the banks of river Mandovi (also known as Mahadayi or Mhadei in Karnataka) in a community engagement festival called Mhadei Amchi Mai (Mhadei My Mother). Organized by the Earthivist Collective, in association with the Goa Heritage Action Group (GHAG) and the Save Mhadei Save Goa Front, the festival is a run-up to the much-anticipated Supreme Court final hearing in July this year of the long-drawn water-sharing dispute between Goa and the neighbouring Karnataka.

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What’s the Goa-Karnataka water dispute all about?

The river: At its origin near the village Mabulyesheir (Bhimgad, Karnataka), the Mandovi river is a cluster of springs and is known as Bhaburnal. It forms into a river at Degaon village in Khanapur taluk of Karnataka’s Belagavi district. The west-flowing river meanders roughly 35 km through Karnataka and then 52 km through Goa before flowing into the Arabian Sea. The downstream state (Goa) constitutes a large part of the river’s catchment (78 percent), which also includes runoff from Maharashtra. Though the main tributary of Mandovi does not flow through Maharashtra, the state is also party to the water-sharing dispute.