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26/07/2010 India keeps close watch on Kosi, `Bihar's sorrow'     Kathmandu, July 26 (IANS) With the crisis of 2008 still fresh   in mind, when a rain-gorged Kosi river wreaked havoc in southern Nepal and   India's Bihar state, India has begun de-silting the mighty river to avert a   fresh crisis this monsoon, the first such effort in nearly 50   years. India's Minister of State for Water Resources Vincent   H. Pala paid a surprise visit to Sunsari district in southern Nepal Sunday to   inspect the removal of debris from the pilot channels of the Kosi river in a bid   to prevent the swirling waters from breaching embankments and triggering floods.
 
 The government of Bihar, which is entrusted with the maintenance and   repair of the Kosi barrage, has brought a dredger machine, reportedly costing   nearly NRS 50 million, to remove the accumulating sand and silt in the bed of   the river and help keep the water level down.
 
 This is the first time   since the construction of the Kosi barrage in 1962, as per a bilateral pact   between India and Nepal, that the river is being de-silted, Nepal's official   media said Monday.
 
 The Indian government initiated the move after   reports in Nepal's media last week that due to the arrival of the rains, the   flow of water in the Kosi river had reached an all-time high.
 
 India has   also sent a team of engineers and technicians to oversee the process.
 
 Last year, India sent its Minster for Parliamentary Affairs and Water   Resources Pawan Kumar Bansal to inspect the Kosi barrage.
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