Pakistan government wrote letters to the Government of India
Pakistan has formally urged India to reconsider its decision to suspend the Indus Water Treaty. The news of India Today states that according to sources, the Ministry of Water Resources of Pakistan has written a letter to the Foreign Ministry of India, warning that New Delhi’s move to stop the treaty could create a crisis in Pakistan. The government of Pakistan has also written to the Ministry of Water Power on Wednesday (14 May 2025) and appealed to re -consider the postponement of the Indus Water Agreement.
Pakistan’s Water Resources Secretary wrote a letter
Pakistan’s Water Resources Secretary Sayyid Ali Murtaza has written a letter to India in which he said, “The postponement of Indus Water Agreement has created a big water crisis for the kharif crop in Pakistan, consider the Indus Water Treaty once again.” Pakistan has also sent a copy of this letter to the Ministry of External Affairs of India.
India has postponed Indus Water Treaty
Please tell that so far no reaction of India has come on it. India decided to postpone the Indus Water Treaty by the Cabinet Committee of Security Affairs (CCS) after reviewing the continuous support of terrorism by Islamabad. Foreign Ministry spokesman Randhir Jaiswal said in a press briefing, “The Indus Water Treaty was concluded with goodwill and friendship, as is specified in the preamble of the treaty. However, Pakistan has postponed these principles by promoting across the border terrorism for decades.”
Why India has postponed water treaty
The 1960 Treaty, an intermediary by the World Bank, allocated control to India on three Eastern rivers and Pakistan on three Western rivers, ensuring continuous cooperation even during increased tension. However, this is the first time India has completely suspended it.
Explain that this diplomatic deadlock took place after Operation Sindoor, which was India’s accurate military operation after tourists’ massacre on 22 April in Jammu and Kashmir. The attack was carried out by terrorists supported by groups in Pakistan.
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