MIANWALI: The inclusion of Kas Umar Khan canal remodeling project in the current fiscal’s Annual Development Programme of Punjab has delighted farmers of Isakhel tehsil.
The two centuries old water channel, described by some locals as a heritage project, will irrigate a vast area after its completion. Irrigation officials say it will take two years.
Credit for its inclusion in ADP goes to Irrigation Minister Amanatullah Khan Shadi Khel, who hails from Isakhel.
Rs5bn project to benefit Isakhel tehsil
The ‘neglected’ Isakhel tehsil bordering KP has vast tracts of baron land due to water shortage. It heavily depends on rain and, to some extent, on Kas Umar canal. The mighty Indus which passes through the tehsil cannot benefit it due to higher ground level.
According to the revenue record, the Isakhel tehsil is spread over 457,958 acres. Of it only 296,534 acres are irrigated through canal, tubewell and rain.
As the history goes, the Khans of Isakhel had been main landowners of the area for long. One of them -- Mohammad Omer Khan s/o Khan Zaman Khan who died in 1825 -- floated the idea to construct a canal to irrigate baron lands of the area.
A 15km-long canal was dug from Kurram river at Dara Tang, entrance point in Punjab from KP, up to Kaloor Sharif village. He constructed an earth-filled spur on River Kurram to divert its water into the canal.
The River Kurram runs from KP and falls into the Indus at Kundal in Isakhel tehsil. It swells during torrential rains due to hill torrents from surrounding mountains.
British Major Edward, who served in the area, referred to Kas Umar Khan canal in his book “A year on the Punjab Frontier in 1848-49”. He narrated that during 1848 the canal had a vast command area.
The Mianwali Gazetteer of 1915 also discussed this water channel as a seasonal canal fed by the River Kurram. The gazetteer further revealed that other Khans of Isakhel tried to follow Omer Khan in the year 1890 and constructed a number of canals from the Kurram to irrigate katcha area of Isakhel but with the passage of time these canals fade away.