India's unilateral halt to water treaty: 4 options Pakistan can take

Experts say mediation via World Bank, direct talks with Delhi are Islamabad's choices

20250528 india pakistan

India's suspension of the Indus Waters Treaty poses a significant economic threat to Pakistan's irrigated farming and hydropower generation. (Source photos by AP and Reuters)

ADNAN AAMIR

ISLAMABAD -- After military clashes between India and Pakistan broke out earlier this month -- at more than three days' duration, making them the most inflamed between the two countries in decades -- a ceasefire was agreed on May 10. But the bilateral water-sharing Indus Waters Treaty remains in abeyance, as India unilaterally suspended it on April 23, a day after a deadly attack killed 26 civilians in the India-administered part of Kashmir.

In response, the Pakistan government said, "Any attempt to stop or divert the flow of water belonging to Pakistan as per the Indus Waters Treaty and the usurpation of the rights of lower riparian will be considered as an Act of War." But the unilateral suspension of the treaty has not been rolled back by New Delhi, posing a significant economic threat to Pakistan's economy, as about 80% of its irrigated agriculture and hydropower generation rely on the Indus water system.

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