Pakistan has strongly refuted India's alleged attempts to control rivers, particularly the Indus basin, by treating water as a "strategic asset." Islamabad asserts that India's decision to place the Indus Water Treaty in "abeyance" is an illegal move, using terrorism as a baseless pretext. Pakistan maintains that water should not be a tool for coercion and any denial of its rightful share violates international obligations.

Future of river-sharing treaty that has survived wars, border conflicts and prolonged diplomatic freezes in the past is now under threat

Pakistan has warned that any attempt by India to deprive Pakistan of its share of water under the Indus Waters Treaty would amount to the “weaponization of water” and could have…

Pakistan's Deputy PM reaffirms the Indus Waters Treaty’s validity, warning that its suspension could threaten regional peace and security.

New Delhi paused its participation in the agreement following the killing of 26 tourists in Indian-controlled Kashmir last April.

Pakistan vehemently rejects India's revocation of the Indus Waters Treaty, asserting its continued validity and binding nature. Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar emphasized the…

Pakistan, at a global conference, cautioned that the failure of the Indus Waters Treaty could undermine international stability and existing world order.

Pakistan has strongly refuted India's alleged attempts to control rivers, particularly the Indus basin, by treating water as a "strategic asset." Islamabad asserts that India's…