Pakistan accuses India of ‘weaponizing water’ and threatening stability
Pakistan alleges India manipulated Chenab River flows by releasing 58,000 cusecs abruptly then reducing to 870 cusecs, violating the treaty and threatening millions' livelihoods.
- On Friday, Pakistan's Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar accused India of 'weaponizing water' by manipulating flows into Pakistan, violating the Indus Waters Treaty and committing material breaches.
- After India suspended the treaty following the April 22 Pahalgam attack that killed 26, Pakistan says New Delhi halted hydrological data sharing and joint treaty oversight, raising risks of floods and droughts.
- Pakistan's Indus Water Commissioner said Pakistan recorded abrupt Chenab River flow changes from December 7 and alleges Baglihar Dam was emptied and refilled, prompting a formal data request.
- Dar warned the actions risk a humanitarian crisis, saying `Such illegal and irresponsible conduct has the potential to trigger a humanitarian crisis in Pakistan`, and Pakistan has alerted UN Secretary-General António Guterres and the president of the UN General Assembly, urging intervention.
- A Court of Arbitration found that dam manipulation can constitute water weaponisation and clarified the IWT remains legally binding, with historical Chenab flows from 4,000 to 1,000 cusecs.
34 Articles
34 Articles
Indus Waters Treaty suspension sparks crisis in Pakistan, deputy PM Ishaq Dar cries 'our people will die'
The impact of India's decisive action after the Pahalgam terror attack is now being felt sharply in Pakistan, with the situation turning grim across the country. After India put the Indus Waters Treaty in abeyance, water scarcity has begun to hit Pakistan hard, triggering panic at the highest levels of its leadership. Pakistan's Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar on Friday issued a strongly worded statement, accusing India of "…
Pakistan accuses India of disrupting river flows
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Friday (Dec 19) said it had detected "abrupt variations" of water flows on a river crucial to its farmers, accusing neighbouring India of releasing water without warning in defiance of a major treaty that New Delhi suspended this year.India in April announced it was suspending the Indus
Pakistan accuses India of 'weaponizing water' and threatening stability
Pakistan’s deputy prime minister on Friday accused neighboring India of “weaponizing water” by releasing water from Indian dams without warning, saying the move violates a World Bank-brokered water-sharing treaty and threatens peace and stability in the region.
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