
Water wars: as India weaponises rivers, Pakistan thirsts for security
Wars aren't always fought with missiles and guns. Sometimes, the weapon is water.
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India demonstrated just how potent that weapon can be this month when it reduced the flow of a tributary to the Indus River, a lifeline for Pakistan 's food security.
Weeks earlier, New Delhi had suspended a decades-old water-sharing agreement with its nuclear-armed neighbour in response to a
deadly militant attack on tourists in Indian-administered Kashmir.
On Tuesday, Indian Prime Minister
Narendra Modi declared that his country would stop its water from flowing over international borders, saying: 'India's water will flow for India's benefit, it will be conserved for India's benefit, and it will be used for India's progress.'
A day later, Delhi unleashed a
barrage of strikes on Pakistani territory. Both countries have since exchanged cross-border fire and shelling and sent drones and missiles into each other's airspace, with about four dozen people dying in the violence.
Residents inspect the rubble of a building destroyed by an Indian missile strike in Muridke, a town near Lahore, Pakistan, on Wednesday. Photo: Xinhua
For Pakistan, a downstream nation reliant on external sources for more than three-quarters of its renewable water supplies, the message of the past few weeks has been unmistakable: water is power, and power can be wielded.
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