India Pakistan water treaty remains suspended despite ceasefire sources say
NEW DELHI/KARACHI - A key water-sharing pact between India and Pakistan remains suspended, four government sources told Reuters, despite the countries reaching a ceasefire agreement on May 10 after days of deadly fighting.
The Indus Waters Treaty, mediated by the World Bank in 1960, regulates the division of water from the Indus River and its tributaries between the South Asian nations.
India pulled out of it in April after a deadly attack targeting Hindu tourists in Kashmir that it said was backed by Islamabad.
Pakistan denied involvement in the violence and had said it was preparing international legal action over the suspension of the treaty, which ensures water for 80 per cent of its farms.
“Indus Waters Treaty was not really a part of (ceasefire) discussions,” said a source from Pakistan’s Water Ministry.
An Indian government source told Reuters there was “no change in stand” on the treaty.
There was no immediate response from India’s Foreign Ministry on the matter, or from officials at Pakistan’s Water Ministry and the information minister.
The pact was one of many tit-for-tat measures taken by the South Asian nations after the Kashmir attack, including the closure of land borders, suspension of trade and a pause on the issuance of almost all categories of visas to each other’s citizens.
Two sources from the Indian government told Reuters that all the measures taken against Pakistan, including on trade and visas, would remain in place despite the pause in violence between the countries.
India’s Foreign Ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the matter.
India and Pakistan had engaged in daily clashes since May 5 when India struck multiple locations in Pakistan that it said were “terrorist camps”.
Fighting paused on the evening of May 10, with the countries reaching what Pakistan termed
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