TODAY’S PAPER | March 20, 2026 | EPAPER

Pakistan warns against water weaponisation at UN, rejects India’s IWT stance

Musadik Malik calls India’s move unilateral and unjustified, saying it threatens agreements and regional stability


Web Desk March 20, 2026 2 min read
Minister for Climate Change Musadik Malik. PHOTO: FILE

Pakistan has warned at the United Nations against the “weaponisation of water”, calling it a threat to regional stability, economic security, and the livelihoods of millions, while strongly criticising India’s stance on the Indus Waters Treaty.

Speaking at a high-level event marking World Water Day, Climate Change Minister Musadik Malik said the politicisation of water resources amounted to an attack on Pakistan’s social and economic fabric, Radio Pakistan reported.

He described India’s move to place the treaty in abeyance as “deeply concerning”, terming it unilateral, unjustified, and in violation of a longstanding cooperative framework.

“Such actions undermine not only agreements but also regional stability,” the minister said, warning that turning water into a geopolitical tool could have far-reaching consequences.

In a right of reply at the same forum, Second Secretary Aleena Majeed rejected what she called “baseless remarks” by the Indian representative and defended the legal standing of the treaty.

 

She noted that the agreement, signed in 1960, had endured wars, crises, and prolonged political tensions — including the dispute over Jammu and Kashmir — and remained a cornerstone of water-sharing between the two countries.

Majeed said India’s unilateral move to hold the treaty in abeyance last year marked a “grave departure” from its legal and historical foundations.

“No provision of the treaty permits unilateral suspension or modification,” she said, adding that such actions amounted to the weaponisation of water for narrow political gains and jeopardised the lifelines of millions.

Referring to a 2025 supplemental award by the Court of Arbitration, she said the ruling affirmed that the treaty remains in force, its dispute-resolution mechanisms are binding, and no party has the authority to render it inoperative. “India must revert immediately to full and complete implementation of the treaty,” she said.

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Majeed also rejected India’s allegations related to terrorism, calling them unfounded and accusing New Delhi of attempting to deflect attention from its own record.

She further alleged that India had been involved in cross-border destabilisation and cited what she described as evidence of support for militant groups targeting Pakistan.

Reiterating Islamabad’s position, she said Pakistan remains committed to international law and the faithful implementation of treaty obligations, while firmly opposing any attempt to use water as a political instrument.

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Separately, Malik highlighted Pakistan’s economic vulnerability to water insecurity, noting that agriculture contributes around 25–30% to GDP and supports nearly half of the workforce.

He added that more than 61% of women’s employment is linked to agriculture, underscoring the connection between water access, livelihoods, and gender equity.

The minister also pointed to the human cost of climate-related disasters, saying that recent floods had killed thousands, injured many more, and displaced millions, further intensifying pressure on already fragile water systems.

He stressed that cooperative water management frameworks must be preserved, warning that their erosion risks escalating tensions in an already volatile region.

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bazza | 1 hour ago | Reply Pakistan has plenty of arsenic laced water
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