Pakistan warns India’s Indus treaty move threatens water security

Islamabad tells UN India’s unilateral action risks regional stability and breaches 1960 accord

Unilateral suspension of IWT threatens regional stability. PHOTO: RADIO PAKISTAN

Pakistan has warned that India’s unilateral suspension of the Indus Waters Treaty poses a serious threat to water security and regional stability, saying the landmark agreement remains legally binding and cannot be altered by one side alone.

The remarks were made by Pakistan’s Acting Permanent Representative to the United Nations, Ambassador Usman Jadoon, at the Global Water Bankruptcy Policy Roundtable hosted by the Permanent Mission of Canada and the United Nations University on Tuesday.

Jadoon described India’s decision as that of a country that deliberately weaponises water. He said Pakistan’s position was unequivocal: the Indus Waters Treaty remains legally intact and permits no unilateral suspension or modification.

In a press release issued by Pakistan’s Permanent Mission to the UN, Jadoon said India’s move to hold the treaty in abeyance in April last year, followed by unannounced disruptions of downstream water flows and the withholding of hydrological information, amounted to material breaches of the agreement.

Read: India’s suspension of Indus Waters Treaty, International Law, and Pakistan’s right of self-defence

Speaking at the roundtable, he said the 1960 treaty had, for more than six decades, provided a time-tested framework for the equitable and predictable management of the Indus River basin. He noted that the system supports over 80% of Pakistan’s agricultural water needs and sustains the livelihoods of more than 240 million people.

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