
Freeze On Indus Waters Treaty Not Illegal: Top Official Rubbishes Pak Claim
NEW DELHI:
India has rejected Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif's allegation that India's decision to put Indus Water Treaty in abeyance is "illegal".
Talking exclusively to NDTV, Jalshakti Ministry's Adviser on Indus Water Treaty and former Commissioner (Indus) Kushvinder Vohra said India's decision to put the Indus Water Treaty in abeyance is "legally valid as per the prevailing International Laws".
"The Vienna Convention on International Treaties is not strictly applicable on the Indus Water Treaty as it became effective only in 1980 and the Treaties made before 1980 does not come under its ambit. IWT was signed in 1960," he said.
Nevertheless, even as per convention, when fundamental circumstances change, Indus Water Treaty can be suspended or abrogated as may be the situation, Mr Vohra explained.
"India has used its rights to put the treaty in abeyance since Pakistan has consistently acted against the spirit of goodwill and friendship which was the cornerstone of Indus Water Treaty," he said.
Under these circumstances, even if Pakistan goes to international forums to challenge India's decision, its case will not stand because there are fundamental changes in circumstances, especially in terms of Islamabad acting against the spirit of goodwill and friendship, technological changes, climate change effects among others, he added.
At the International Conference on Glaciers' Preservation,
On Friday, Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif had said at an international conference that his country would not allow India to cross the red line by holding the Indus Waters Treaty in abeyance and endangering millions of lives for narrow political gains.
India had hit back, condemning Pakistan's action.
At a UN conference on glaciers in Tajikistan's Dushanbe, Minister of State for Environment Kirti Vardhan Singh said Pakistan was violating the treaty through terrorism. "Pakistan, which itself is in violation of the treaty, should desist from putting the blame of the breach of the treaty on India," he said.
The treaty's preamble says it was concluded in the spirit of goodwill and friendship, and honouring the treaty in good faith is essential, he had added.
The Indus Waters Treaty, signed in 1960 between India and Pakistan with the World Bank as a signatory, governs the sharing of the Indus River system's waters between the two countries. India put a freeze on it after the terror attack on tourists in Pahalgam on April 22 in which 26 people died.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Print
2 hours ago
- The Print
Pakistan sends delegation to Moscow to push its diplomatic case in bid to weaken India-Russia ties
According to the ministry, the visit was aimed at 'projecting Pakistan's perspective on the recent Indian aggression'. 'Special Assistant to the Prime Minister, Syed Tariq Fatemi, will lead the delegation to Moscow from 2 to 4 June 2025. During the visit, he is scheduled to hold meetings with senior Russian officials and also engage with media and think tanks,' Pakistan's Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement on the social media platform X. New Delhi: Pakistan announced that it was sending a delegation, led by the special assistant to Pakistan's prime minister, Syed Tariq Fatemi, to Moscow this week, as it launches a charm offensive following the conflict with India last month. 'The delegations will highlight Pakistan's responsible and restrained conduct—seeking peace with responsibility—in the face of India's reckless and belligerent actions in violation of international law. They will also highlight that dialogue and diplomacy should take precedence over conflict and confrontation.' Separately, a multi-party delegation, led by former foreign minister Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, is set to travel to New York, Washington DC, London and Brussels, it further said. The Pakistani delegation to the US, the UK and Belgium will consist of nine members from all parties, including former foreign minister Hina Rabbani Khar, minister of climate change and environmental coordination Musadik Masood Malik, former minister for information and climate change Sherry Rehman and former foreign secretaries Jallil Abbas Jilani and Tehmina Janjua. The visit to Moscow comes as India and Russia continue to maintain a close strategic partnership. Moscow has historically supported New Delhi in its conflicts with Islamabad over the years, with a friendship treaty signed between India and the USSR in 1971 on the eve of the Liberation of Bangladesh. India used Russian S-400 air defence systems during the recent flare-up with Pakistan between 7 May and 10 May. However, in recent years, especially after the war with Ukraine, Russia has strengthened its ties with China. Beijing is an important economic and military partner for Islamabad, and Pakistan used a number of Chinese military platforms against India last month. The announcement of the delegations comes on the heels of Moscow denying reports that it had signed a multibillion-dollar deal with Islamabad, calling them 'fake reports'. Also Read: Pakistan likely to hold open sessions at UNSC on J&K, Operation Sindoor during its presidency in July Seeks to internationalise Kashmir issue Pakistan's delegations will attempt to internationalise the Kashmir as well as the Indus Waters Treaty issues during the visits. 'The delegations will underscore the imperative for the international community to play its due role in promoting a lasting peace in South Asia. The need for immediate resumption of the normal functioning of the Indus Waters Treaty will also be a key theme of the delegations' outreach.' India had announced that it will hold the IWT in abeyance as a part of its earliest punitive measures against Pakistan in the aftermath of the deadly terrorist attack in Pahalgam in April. The treaty, which was signed in 1960, had survived multiple wars and skirmishes. Over the recent years, Pakistan ignored India's request to renegotiate the treaty. The announcement of Pakistan's delegations came after India sent seven all-party delegations along with former ambassadors to 33 countries, including members of the United Nations Security Council, to push New Delhi's diplomatic case regarding Operation Sindoor. As a result, Colombia, promised to withdraw its statement sympathising with Pakistan over the loss of lives due to Operation Sindoor, and said that New Delhi's position will be 'strongly supported,' according to Shashi Tharoor, the MP leading the delegation to the South American nation. Meanwhile, Pakistan has received support for its position from Turkey and Azerbaijan, with a trilateral leader's summit held last week in Lachin, Azerbaijan. While Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif mentioned J&K in his address, neither of the other leaders, Presidents Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Ilham Aliyev, mentioned it in their statements. (Edited by Sanya Mathur) Also Read: Erdogan calls for firming up Pakistan-Turkey-Azerbaijan axis, Baku offers $2 bn for Islamabad


India Gazette
3 hours ago
- India Gazette
"Not trying to start a war, just conducting retribution for act of terror": Shashi Tharoor on Operation Sindoor
Brasilia [Brazil], June 2 (ANI): Congress leader Shashi Tharoor, who is leading the all-party delegation, said on Monday that the whole idea of Operation Sindoor was to signal that India is not trying to start war, but just conducting 'retribution for an act of terror,' in response to the Pahalgam terror attack. This comes during his interaction with Ambassador Celso Amorim, Head Adviser of the Special Advisory to the President of the Republic in Brasilia. 'The whole idea was to signal that we are not trying to start a war, we are just conducting retribution for an act of terror, which was a really vile act, 26 people being was horrendous and it was meant to do the maximum possible damage to India, to disrupt the Kashmiri economy, which was booming, to end the prospects of tourism flourishing in to perhaps create a communal backlash in India...,' Tharoor said. The Congress leader highlighted India's strong stance against terrorism, saying that they have come here to understand the understanding on the part of friends and countries that are not necessarily our friends. ' The reason we have come is very much to seek greater sympathy and understanding on the part of our friends, and also countries that are not necessarily our friend, but you are in the high friend category, for the situations in the recent months in particular the really serious attack on country by terrorists in Kashmir...I must say that, seeing the statement by Brazil, we were also very touched by President telephoning our PM, personally, to express his concern and was no action to bring the perpetrators to justice and even to look for them in finally govt decided to send a strong a message...,' Tharoor further said. Tharoor talked of Pakistan's pressure to remove references to TRF, a front for LeT, in UN Security Council press statement on April 25. TRF had claimed responsibility for the Pahalgam terror attack. '...LeT (Lashkar-e-Taiba) has created this front called Resistance Front, we have been reporting about Resistance Front to UN Sanctions Committee, time after India encouraged our friends on Security Council to mention the Resistance Front in the press statement that Security Council govt, I am sorry to say that with the support of your friend in China, took out the name, so there is not even a are not on the Security Council, neither are you. We have to change that situation. Both of us should be on the Council together,' he said. A group calling itself The Resistance Front (TRF) has claimed responsibility for the attack. This group is a front for the UN-proscribed Pakistani terrorist group, Lashkar-e-Taiba. Notably, India had given inputs about the TRF in the half-yearly report to the Monitoring Team of the UN's 1267 Sanctions Committee in May and November 2024, bringing out its role as a cover for Pakistan-based terrorist groups. Earlier too, in December 2023, India had informed the monitoring team about LeT and Jaish-e-Mohammad operating through small terror groups such as the TRF. Pakistan's pressure to remove references to TRF in the April 25 UN Security Council Press Statement is notable in this regard. On June 1, the delegation led by Tharoor was welcomed by Sandeep Kumar Kujur, Charge d'Affaires of the Indian Embassy in Brazil after landing there. The delegation is set to leave for United States tomorrow. (ANI)


Hindustan Times
5 hours ago
- Hindustan Times
UN chief calls for probe into deaths near Gaza aid site
UN chief Antonio Guterres called Monday for an independent investigation into the killing and wounding of scores of Palestinians near a US-backed aid centre in Gaza the day before. Gaza's civil defence agency said Israeli gunfire killed at least 31 people and wounded 176 near the aid distribution site in the southern city of Rafah on Sunday, with medics at nearby hospitals also reporting a deluge of gunshot wound victims. The Israeli military denied firing at people "while they were near or within" the site. But a military source acknowledged "warning shots were fired towards several suspects" overnight about a kilometre away. "I am appalled by the reports of Palestinians killed and injured while seeking aid in Gaza yesterday. It is unacceptable that Palestinians are risking their lives for food," Guterres said in a statement, without assigning blame for the deaths. "I call for an immediate and independent investigation into these events and for perpetrators to be held accountable." The Israeli government has worked with the group running the site, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), to introduce a new mechanism for distributing aid in Gaza that has bypassed the longstanding UN-led system. The UN has declined to work with the group out of concerns about its neutrality. One 33-year-old who was present on Sunday told AFP it was "around 5 or 5:30 am, before sunrise" when the gunfire broke out at a spot known as the Al-Alam roundabout, where a crowd had gathered from the wee hours of the morning to wait before heading to the GHF centre about a kilometre away. "Of course it was the Israeli army who shot live bullets," said the witness, who declined to be named for fear of Israeli reprisals. "Thousands of people were waiting at Al-Alam roundabout... but the army fired and everyone ran away. There was fear and chaos. I saw with my own eyes martyrs and wounded in the area." Another witness elsewhere in the crowd, 35-year-old Mohammed Abu Deqqa, said "at first, we thought they were warning shots". "But it didn't take long before the shooting intensified. I began to see people lying on the ground, covered in blood. That was around 5:30 am," he said. "People started running, but many couldn't escape. The bullets were chasing people even as they tried to flee." AFP photos taken around 5:40 am showed civilians loading bodies onto donkey carts shortly after sunrise. Gaza civil defence spokesman Mahmud Bassal said teams of rescuers arrived around 6:00 am and began assisting with the dead and wounded, though civilians and other paramedics had already taken some to Nasser hospital and a Red Cross field hospital. The military on Sunday said an initial inquiry indicated its troops "did not fire at civilians while they were near or within the humanitarian aid distribution site", and urged "media to be cautious with information published" by Hamas. But according to an Israeli military source, "warning shots were fired towards several suspects who advanced towards the troops" overnight. The incident took place "approximately one kilometre away" from the GHF distribution centre, outside of operating hours, the source said. Army spokesman Effie Defrin said Sunday that "Hamas is doing its best, its utmost, to stop us from" distributing aid, and vowed to "investigate each one of those allegations" against Israeli troops. A GHF spokesperson also accused Hamas of circulating "fake reports", saying: "All aid was distributed today without incident." In a video message from Nasser hospital later Sunday morning, visiting British surgeon Victoria Rose described a scene of "absolute carnage", saying "all the bays are full, and they're all gunshot wounds". The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said that its field hospital in Rafah received 179 people, including 21 pronounced dead on arrival. The ICRC reported that all the wounded "said they had been trying to reach an aid distribution site", adding that "the majority suffered gunshot or shrapnel wounds". GHF said that as of Monday, it had distributed more than 5.8 million meals' worth of food from its centres. Israel has come under increasing international pressure to improve the humanitarian situation in Gaza following a more than two-month blockade on aid that was only recently eased. The UN has warned the entire population is at risk of famine, and has also reported recent incidents of aid being looted, including by armed individuals. Talks aimed at reaching a ceasefire have so far failed to produce a breakthrough. Civil defence spokesman Bassal said 14 people were killed on Monday in an Israeli strike on a house in Jabalia, in the north. The Israeli military also issued an evacuation order for several western parts of Khan Yunis in the south, warning residents it would "operate with intense force" there. The health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza says at least 4,201 people have been killed in the territory since Israel resumed its offensive on March 18, taking the war's overall toll to 54,470, mostly civilians. Hamas's 2023 attack on Israel resulted in the deaths of 1,218 people, also mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official figures.