Key Points

Pakistan is preparing to issue a formal diplomatic notice challenging India's suspension of the Indus Waters Treaty following the Pahalgam terror attack. The Pakistani government plans to seek explanations through diplomatic channels and global forums like the World Bank and UN. India has justified the suspension, citing the need for justice against terror perpetrators. The tension highlights the complex geopolitical and water-sharing dynamics between the two nations.

Key Points: Pakistan Challenges India's IWT Suspension Over Pahalgam Attack

  • Pakistan preparing formal diplomatic notice challenging IWT suspension
  • Seeking global forum interventions including World Bank and UN
  • Alleging India's unilateral water policy aggression
  • Demanding explanations for treaty suspension
2 min read

Pakistan to issue formal diplomatic notice to India over IWT suspension

Pakistan prepares diplomatic counteraction against India's Indus Waters Treaty suspension following terror attack, seeking global intervention

"We believe that India will be compelled to revisit its decision on the IWT - Pakistani Government Source"

Islamabad, May 2

The government of Pakistan has decided to issue a formal diplomatic notice to India over its "unilateral decision" to put the Indus Waters Treaty (IWT) in abeyance after the Pehalgam terror attack in which 26 innocent civilians were gunned down by four terrorists, including two Pakistanis, on April 22.

Pakistan's Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Ministry of Law, and relevant quarters of water resources have been engaged in constant deliberations immediately after Indian announced that it was putting the IWT in abeyance in response to measures taken against Islamabad after Pahalgam terror incident.

Sources revealed that preliminary groundwork to lodge a formal notice has been completed and it will be dispatched in the coming days through diplomatic channels.

"The notice will seek concrete explanations from India for suspending the landmark 1960 treaty, which governs water sharing between the two countries," sources in the Indus Commission said.

Moreover, Pakistan is also working towards lodging formal complaints at global forums including the World Bank (WB), which is the guarantor of the agreement.

Complaints will also be lodged at the United Nations (UN) and other global forums through diplomatic outreach.

Pakistan terms India's unilateral decision to suspend the IWT as New Delhi’s water aggression, and believes that it holds legal primacy on the treaty.

"We believe that India will be compelled to revisit its decision on the IWT. Pakistan will take all actions following the approval from the federal cabinet," said a government source in Islamabad.

India has blamed Pakistan for the Pahalgam attack after The Resistance Front (TRF), a proxy of Pakistan-based terror group Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) claimed responsibility for it.

New Delhi has also made it clear that the perpetrators and planners of the Pahalgam terror attack have to be brought to justice first and that blood and water cannot flow together.

- IANS

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