"We are neutral. We cannot take a stand," Solicitor General Ranjit Kumar told a five-judge constitution bench headed by Justice A R Dave which conducting a hearing on the Presidential Reference pertaining to Punjab Termination of Agreements Act, 2004.
The Solicitor General's statement came after Punjab Government, through its senior counsel Rajeev Dhavan, said the Centre has to make its stand clear and it cannot leave the matter upto the states to be decided.
Dhavan said it was not just an issue of water sharing and the entire reference involved a question of policy.
On March 14, the Centre had said in the hearing on Presidential Reference that "the Centre will not take any side".
On the same day, Punjab Assembly had passed the bill against construction of contentious SYL canal providing for transfer of proprietary rights back to the land owners free of cost.
The apex court in its interim order had also appointed Union Home Secretary and Punjab's Chief Secretary and Director General of Police (DGP) as the 'joint receiver' of land and other property meant for the SYL canal till further order.
The legislation -- Punjab Sutlej-Yamuna Link Canal (Rehabilitation and Re-vesting of Proprietary Rights) Bill, paves way for denotifying 5,300 acres of land acquired in Punjab side for 122 km SYL canal of which 92 km falls in Haryana side.
