Relevance: GS-2 (International Relations) & GS-3 (Internal Security & Environment) Source: The Indian Express
- What is the Core Issue?
For over a year, India has kept the historic 1960 Indus Waters Treaty (IWT) in “abeyance” (temporary suspension) following a major terror attack in Pahalgam.
- The Administrative Stance: By pausing the treaty, India has stopped sharing water data with Pakistan. The government is strictly enforcing a clear message: “blood and water cannot flow together.”
- The Condition: India has stated that normal treaty operations will only resume when Pakistan completely and permanently stops supporting cross-border terrorism.
- The Treaty Basics
To understand this diplomatic move, an administrator must know how the rivers were geographically divided by the World Bank in 1960:
- The Eastern Rivers (Ravi, Beas, Sutlej): India has absolute, 100% ownership and rights over the water of these three rivers.
- The Western Rivers (Indus, Jhelum, Chenab): These were allocated to Pakistan. However, India (being the upper state) is allowed to use them for limited, non-consumptive purposes, like running hydroelectric power plants and domestic agriculture.
- The Vulnerability: Pakistan is the “lower riparian” state. It is highly dependent on these rivers, which fulfill over 70% of its massive agricultural irrigation needs.
- Pakistan’s International Strategy (Mains Focus)
Since Pakistan cannot change the geographical fact that these rivers flow from India, it is trying to build international diplomatic pressure:
- Security Angle (UNSC): Pakistan is trying to frame India’s water suspension as a direct threat to regional peace at the UN Security Council.
- Human Rights Angle (UNHRC): Pakistan is using international NGOs to argue that depriving people of water is a violation of basic human rights.
- Legal Angle (The Hague): Pakistan has dragged India to the Court of Arbitration (CoA), complaining about India’s hydroelectric dam projects on the Western rivers.
- India’s Two-Pronged Counter-Strategy
India is handling Pakistan’s pressure tactics with a strong, dual approach:
- A. Diplomatic Rejection: India has completely boycotted the Court of Arbitration. New Delhi argues that the 1960 treaty already has a built-in rule to solve disputes using a World Bank-appointed “Neutral Expert.” Therefore, a parallel international court case is legally invalid.
- B. Massive Infrastructure Push: For decades, Pakistan used the treaty’s rules to object to and delay Indian dams. With the treaty suspended, India is now aggressively finishing its long-delayed hydropower and dam projects on the Western rivers. This ensures India legally utilizes its full share of water to boost the economic development of Jammu & Kashmir.
- Value Addition
Beyond terrorism, India is quietly building an administrative case that this 65-year-old treaty needs a complete renegotiation due to modern challenges:
- Climate Change: The 1960 treaty assumed river flows would always be stable. Today, melting Himalayan glaciers and erratic monsoons make rigid water-sharing formulas impractical.
- Population Boom: The population dependent on these rivers in both countries has exploded since 1960, multiplying the demand for drinking and farming water.
- J&K’s Growth: The old rules strictly limit how much water the people of Jammu and Kashmir can use from their own rivers, unfairly harming their energy and economic aspirations.
UPSC Value Box
- Abeyance: A legal and administrative term meaning a state of temporary suspension or inactivity.
- Riparian State: A country or state situated on the banks of a river. (India is the upper riparian, controlling the source; Pakistan is the lower riparian).
- Run-of-the-River Project: A hydroelectric power station that generates electricity using the natural, flowing water of the river without building a massive, disruptive reservoir to hold back the water.
Q.1. With reference to the Indus Waters Treaty of 1960, consider the following statements:
- The waters of the Eastern rivers (Ravi, Beas, and Sutlej) are allocated exclusively to Pakistan for unrestricted use.
- The treaty allows India limited, non-consumptive use of the Western rivers for hydroelectricity generation.
- The World Bank is a signatory to the treaty and plays a role in its established dispute resolution mechanism.
Which of the statements given above is/are correct? (a) 1 and 2 only (b) 2 and 3 only (c) 1 and 3 only (d) 1, 2 and 3
Correct Answer: (b)
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