Pakistan's fear is that the project would impound the Chenab waters within India and thus deprive Pakistan what is exclusively its. |
|
A dam is an artificial barrier constructed across a stream channel to impound water. |
|
It makes no sense to impound stray animals if there is no place to keep them. |
|
Territorial authorities will have the power to impound dogs charged for dangerous offences, while their owners await prosecution proceedings. |
|
Under the law, police can impound the cars and the court can permanently confiscate a vehicle if it is used to commit a second offence. |
|
They have the right to talk to employees and safety representatives, take photographs and samples, and to impound dangerous equipment. |
|
There is to be a new law enabling the authorities to impound property that it suspects, but cannot prove, is the ill-gotten gains of crime. |
|
Dams could both drop water and impound it, and multipurpose dams after World War II seemed self justifying. |
|
This court also condoned Ireland's actions to impound the aircraft pursuant to the EC regulations. |
|
Birds love water, and wildlife authorities are planning to create a few more ponds inside the Guindy National Park to impound rainwater more effectively. |
|
Wetlands shave off peak flows and impound water, thereby increasing the travel time of water down a watercourse. |
|
On 09 January 2003, gendarmes from Hraoua went to the father's house and threatened to impound the vehicle if he did not take it away. |
|
Courts have been known to impound entire firms from their bewildered owners. |
|
Nancy, if there's a derelict car sitting on a street in Delta, the community has the authority to take that vehicle away and impound it. |
|
The Police have the power to seize and impound firearms and ammunition held by licensed dealers. |
|
When it costs EURÂ 10 to impound a dog, one cannot even impound a retired farm woman! |
|
Some provinces have legislation to impound the vehicle driven by drivers while their licence is under suspension. |
|
In principle, the inspectors have the right to impound any products which are not in conformity with the statutory provisions. |
|
Tough new regulations giving the Vehicle Inspectorate powers to impound heavy goods vehicles operated without a licence are now in force with the industry's backing. |
|
It forbids the government to impound weapons in the wake of a national emergency. |
|
|
Fines or impound towing charges due to a violation of local laws. |
|
Nor is there any present plan to introduce amendments that would force police, as a Criminal Code measure, to impound the vehicle of a suspected impaired driver. |
|
In that case, the highly transparent trading process may impound less information in price because people are doing less information investment upstream. |
|
Mr Rich became a leading light in the new National Association for Advanced Foods, with other soyabean experimenters, and let the red-faced representatives of unadvanced foods impound his coffee whitener if they felt like it. |
|
They could not apply for work permits but had to rely on their employers, who would often impound their passports and refuse to pay them for their work. |
|
I already checked that out, and Keller has never called to get it out of impound. |
|
They would have no power to impound the notes, but they would inform the Inland Revenue and the police of any suspiciously large volume of banknotes which they detected. |
|
Basically, around the world people will buy the lobsters and they'll impound them for five or six months, and the lobster will deteriorate as they sit in these pounds. |
|
Asked about the route farther north, he tries to impound your correspondent's passport, cautioning that drug traffickers control the trade routes across the Sahara to the Mediterranean coast. |
|
If a customs authority establishes that the conditions in Article 4 are not fulfilled, it shall detain and impound the shipment, and proceed in accordance with national legislation in force. |
|
The United Kingdom has instructed its customs authorities to impound quantities of alcohol and cigarettes in excess of what it thinks is reasonable for personal consumption. |
|
Dams do not always make good use of the water they impound. |
|