Demand for Cauvery board: Man attempts self-immolation in Tamil Nadu's Erode district, sustains 90% burn injuries

Demand for Cauvery board: Man attempts self-immolation in Tamil Nadu's Erode district, sustains 90% burn injuries

A 25-year-old man set himself ablaze allegedly over the Central and state governments’ “inaction” on the Cauvery issue.

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Demand for Cauvery board: Man attempts self-immolation in Tamil Nadu's Erode district, sustains 90% burn injuries

Erode (Tamil Nadu): A 25-year-old man set himself ablaze on Thursday allegedly over the central and state governments’ “inaction” on the Cauvery issue, police said.

Dharmalingam has sustained 90 percent burn injuries and he has been admitted to the Erode government hospital, where his condition is critical, police and doctors said.

Police said the man was said to be in a disturbed state of mind for the past couple of days.

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The man’s self-immolation bid comes on a day Prime Minister Narendra Modi arrived in the state to formally inaugurate the country’s mega defence exhibition, DefExpo, at Thiruvidanthai.

Representational image. News18

“Cauvery water is the lifeline for the people of Tamil Nadu. Yet, Chief Minister K Palaniswamy and Modi have not take any action to form a Cauvery Management Board. I also oppose Modi’s visit to Tamil Nadu,” reads a message on the wall of his house.

He poured kerosene and set himself ablaze, police said. Doctors said the man has sustained 90 percent burns and his condition is critical.

The state has been witnessing protests by political parties, pro-Tamil outfits, voluntary organisations and student groups. Since 1 April, seeking setting up of a Cauvery Management Board.

On 16 February, the Supreme Court had raised the 270 tmcft share of Cauvery water for Karnataka by 14.75 tmcft and reduced Tamil Nadu’s share while compensating it by allowing extraction of 10 tmcft groundwater from the river basin.

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The court had granted six weeks’ time to the Centre to formulate a scheme to ensure compliance of its 465-page judgement on the decades-old Cauvery dispute, which modified the CWDT award of 2007. The six-week period ended on 29 March.

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