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With India Mulling To Scrap The Indus Water Treaty, Here Are The Concerns It Should First Address

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With India Mulling To Scrap The Indus Water Treaty, Here Are The Concerns It Should First Address
in_1474880027_1024x477.jpg

For most of last week, a little known water treaty has become the centre point of India's diplomatic salvos at Pakistan. From finding a mention in PM Modi's recent speech to being mentioned in the UN by India's envoy, the 56-year-old Indus water treaty finds itself not in the middle of a storm, but the storm itself. With India contemplating the possibility of scraping the Indus Water Treaty of 1960 with Pakistan, the future of more than a billion people rests on the result of a meeting led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
indus_1233_1474873775.jpg

Indus Treaty survived full scale wars in 1965, 1971 along with the Kargil conflict, and attacks on 26/11 in Mumbai and Pathankot attacks. So does Uri attack merit a response this big?



Before we hope for any colossal decision be taken, there are several ifs and buts which need to addressed before we think of closing the tap on the Indus.

Here are major repercussions India would be and should be wary of before taking a decision.


First, what is the Indus Water treaty?

The Indus treaty is called the world’s most generous water-sharing arrangement. Signed on September 19, 1960, it shows how India and Pakistan share the water six rivers – The eastern Beas, Ravi, Sutlej, and western Indus, Chenab and Jhelum and their tributaries.

How Pakistan is benefited from this?
1. Pakistan gets 80% of the water in the 6-river Indus system. This is 90 times greater volume of water than Mexico’s share under a 1944 pact with the US.

2. It is Asia’s only treaty with specific water-sharing formulas on cross-border flows.

3. A virtual line on the Indian map splits the Indus basin.

4. India’s sovereignty lies in the lower rivers, Pakistan’s in the upper.

5. Only water pact compelling an upper riparian state to defer to the interests of a downstream state.

If we scrap it, we will flood our cities
Before we scrap the treaty, we should ponder over this - where would the water, prevented from flowing into Pakistan, go? It would go to our own states, and since we don't have enough dams and canals to channelise the flow of the water, we are certain to flood our cities, especially in Jammu & Kashmir.
indus_kahshsj_1474874101.jpg





J&K is a mountainous state which would prevent the water from flowing towards the lower plains. Had the Indus flowed in Punjab or Haryana, the natural flow to lower plains would have prevented from flooding the cities. If we scrap the treaty in haste, an Uttrakhand like situation is possible.

Since Kashmir isn't an agricultural state, any short terms measure to build infrastructure wouldn't be of much help. And it would take years if India does mull building infrastructure to bring this water to Punjab. From here, with help of a canal system associated with Bhakra Nangal Project, the water can be channelised into states like Punjab, Haryana and Rajasthan.

Since we don't have infrastructure in place, any decision in haste could be catastrophic.

Does India's UN Security Council dream take a beating?
India dreams of becoming a permanent member of the UNSC and its claim to the elite club isn't a joke anymore. Major powers, except China, have given silent consent for India's inclusion. But the scraping the treaty would lead to a loss of credibility, since Indus Water Treaty also involves the World Bank.
indus74903_1474874171.jpg

At present, India has cornered Pakistan, both in UN as well as at other international levels. Scraping of the treaty would tilt the sympathies of international community in Pakistan's favour which would definitely play the victim card.



What if China stops the flow of Indus and Brahmaputra?
China is Pakistan's all weather friend, and if India tightens the noose around Pakistan over tapping the Indus water, China might retaliate in order to safeguard its USD 1.5 billion investment in Pakistan - the CPEC. China doesn't have a water sharing treaty with India and can stop flow of Indus by building a dam. Not only Indus, but other rivers like Brahmaputra too originate from China and the country is already constructing a dam on the river. This is likely to affect the flow of water into India's north-east. If China decide to divert the Indus, India could lose as much as 36 per cent of the river's water.
indusu0345t-i34t04_1474874210.jpg

If India scraps Indus treaty, given the current geo-political scenario, China might strangle the inflow of rivers from its territories into India.
http://www.indiatimes.com/news/with...-concerns-it-should-first-address-262399.html
 
With India Mulling To Scrap The Indus Water Treaty, Here Are The Concerns It Should First Address
in_1474880027_1024x477.jpg

For most of last week, a little known water treaty has become the centre point of India's diplomatic salvos at Pakistan. From finding a mention in PM Modi's recent speech to being mentioned in the UN by India's envoy, the 56-year-old Indus water treaty finds itself not in the middle of a storm, but the storm itself. With India contemplating the possibility of scraping the Indus Water Treaty of 1960 with Pakistan, the future of more than a billion people rests on the result of a meeting led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
indus_1233_1474873775.jpg

Indus Treaty survived full scale wars in 1965, 1971 along with the Kargil conflict, and attacks on 26/11 in Mumbai and Pathankot attacks. So does Uri attack merit a response this big?



Before we hope for any colossal decision be taken, there are several ifs and buts which need to addressed before we think of closing the tap on the Indus.

Here are major repercussions India would be and should be wary of before taking a decision.


First, what is the Indus Water treaty?

The Indus treaty is called the world’s most generous water-sharing arrangement. Signed on September 19, 1960, it shows how India and Pakistan share the water six rivers – The eastern Beas, Ravi, Sutlej, and western Indus, Chenab and Jhelum and their tributaries.

How Pakistan is benefited from this?
1. Pakistan gets 80% of the water in the 6-river Indus system. This is 90 times greater volume of water than Mexico’s share under a 1944 pact with the US.

2. It is Asia’s only treaty with specific water-sharing formulas on cross-border flows.

3. A virtual line on the Indian map splits the Indus basin.

4. India’s sovereignty lies in the lower rivers, Pakistan’s in the upper.

5. Only water pact compelling an upper riparian state to defer to the interests of a downstream state.

If we scrap it, we will flood our cities
Before we scrap the treaty, we should ponder over this - where would the water, prevented from flowing into Pakistan, go? It would go to our own states, and since we don't have enough dams and canals to channelise the flow of the water, we are certain to flood our cities, especially in Jammu & Kashmir.
indus_kahshsj_1474874101.jpg





J&K is a mountainous state which would prevent the water from flowing towards the lower plains. Had the Indus flowed in Punjab or Haryana, the natural flow to lower plains would have prevented from flooding the cities. If we scrap the treaty in haste, an Uttrakhand like situation is possible.

Since Kashmir isn't an agricultural state, any short terms measure to build infrastructure wouldn't be of much help. And it would take years if India does mull building infrastructure to bring this water to Punjab. From here, with help of a canal system associated with Bhakra Nangal Project, the water can be channelised into states like Punjab, Haryana and Rajasthan.

Since we don't have infrastructure in place, any decision in haste could be catastrophic.

Does India's UN Security Council dream take a beating?
India dreams of becoming a permanent member of the UNSC and its claim to the elite club isn't a joke anymore. Major powers, except China, have given silent consent for India's inclusion. But the scraping the treaty would lead to a loss of credibility, since Indus Water Treaty also involves the World Bank.
indus74903_1474874171.jpg

At present, India has cornered Pakistan, both in UN as well as at other international levels. Scraping of the treaty would tilt the sympathies of international community in Pakistan's favour which would definitely play the victim card.



What if China stops the flow of Indus and Brahmaputra?
China is Pakistan's all weather friend, and if India tightens the noose around Pakistan over tapping the Indus water, China might retaliate in order to safeguard its USD 1.5 billion investment in Pakistan - the CPEC. China doesn't have a water sharing treaty with India and can stop flow of Indus by building a dam. Not only Indus, but other rivers like Brahmaputra too originate from China and the country is already constructing a dam on the river. This is likely to affect the flow of water into India's north-east. If China decide to divert the Indus, India could lose as much as 36 per cent of the river's water.
indusu0345t-i34t04_1474874210.jpg

If India scraps Indus treaty, given the current geo-political scenario, China might strangle the inflow of rivers from its territories into India.
http://www.indiatimes.com/news/with...-concerns-it-should-first-address-262399.html

There is no scrapping. Meetings are being suspended. Basically means everything comes to standstill with no dispute resolution on any topic. And I find it absurd China will do this if India does this. China is not America. They are way smarter than to get pulled into a dispute they know is going nowhere.
 
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india should be more worried about the world bank throwing its weight in than China on this one. Its considered as a gross human rights violation on a grand scale. Doing so gives us the excuse to test out our missiles on the dams on a massive scale while the world will sit back and do nothing since the legal right to water is on our side. india knows this that we'll unleash hell.
 
Irrelevant article. It all depends on the capacity of India to complete the projects. Fund, corruption and bureaucracy are the real challenges before India. The violation will only come after India is able to completely use its share. Complete storage of eastern rivers especially during dry seasons and completion of 30 projects in the pipeline.
Immediate effect can be observed if Indian govt revives the wular barrage on Jhelum. 20 dams are planned on Chenab. Indus projects will be difficult because of the terrain. Hopefully Modi govt and power ministry is serious about it. 2000 MW dam on the Subansiri is yet to be completed whose work is stopped due to protest by Assam students union and others. China has managed to lift its population out of poverty because it implemented policies and projects ruthlessly. One child policy, numerous infrastructure projects, ruthlessness of Mao tse tung, land reforms gave China the foundation. Without such aggressive implementation India is decades away if not century, to become middle income. Pakistan is irrelevant here.
 
There is no scrapping. Meetings are being suspended. Basically means everything comes to standstill with no dispute resolution on any topic. And I find it absurd China will do this if India does this. China is not America. They are way smarter than to get pulled into a dispute they no is going nowhere.
why would it be a dispute. they don't have any water treaty with india.
 
why would it be a dispute. they don't have any water treaty with india.

Where am I saying there is a water treaty between India and China? I am saying, they will not do something for Pakistan to prove a point against India and will not get involved in the dispute between India and Pakistan.
 
Pakistan going to world bank will not work. What India is going is within the IWT framework.

Moreover, in an event of war, all legal binding agreements between the countries become void and null.
 
The treaty is not being scrapped.

India will work through the existing provisions of the treaty, draw all of 20 %, re start the wullar / Tulbull project, create water storage / dams..all within the purview of the IWT for a start.
 
Where am I saying there is a water treaty between India and China? I am saying, they will not do something for Pakistan to prove a point against India and will not get involved in the dispute between India and Pakistan.
if india break a water treaty china will have a strong case to stop india water. and for your information they had already conveyed it to your government and assured pakistan that why government of pakistan ministers talk about it in national assembly. more ever world bank had given full assurance to enforce the treaty.
if it was not the case then modi would have already done it. after all he is a reknown terrorist like abu bakr al baghdadi.
 
Pakistan going to world bank will not work. What India is going is within the IWT framework.

Moreover, in an event of war, all legal binding agreements between the countries become void and null.
we had already fought 3 wars with treaty in place. because after the war you may lose the case and will be forced by the ICJ to compensate.
 
Where am I saying there is a water treaty between India and China? I am saying, they will not do something for Pakistan to prove a point against India and will not get involved in the dispute between India and Pakistan.
How many times do you guys have to be proven wrong the internet warriors i am talking about who Think China will not get involved in the dispute between India and Pakistan? I mean there should be a level of naivety. Didn't China snubbed India lately over NSG because of Pakistan? Did China think tanks not said China will get intervene if India destabilises Baluchistan? You underestimate China's ambitions and her interests in Pakistan. After CPEC its a whole lot new ball game. Making absurd statements like China will not get involved etc just to satisfy ego is not going to help.
 
We'll punish Pakistan !

2 hours later...

Surgical strikes ! ..we'll hit Pakistan deep inside..ghuss kay maren gay !


2 hours later...

Okay..okay.We'll only isolate Pakistan.

2 hours later...

We'll punish them by scrapping the IWT.Surely they'll kneel on their knees !

2 hours later...

We're not scrapping the IWT.We'll stay inside its legal framework and do this and do that...

And it goes AAAAN...

*Yaaaawnn*

2 hours later. pakistan will not be given most favourite nations status any more.

How many times do you guys have to be proven wrong the internet warriors i am talking about who Think China will not get involved in the dispute between India and Pakistan? I mean there should be a level of naivety. Didn't China snubbed India lately over NSG because of Pakistan? Did China think tanks not said China will get intervene if India destabilises Baluchistan? You underestimate China's ambitions and her interests in Pakistan. After CPEC its a whole lot new ball game. Making absurd statements like China will not get involved etc just to satisfy ego is not going to help.
pakistan is important for china due to the 400 billions dollar they will save every year due to less cost moving goods gawader to china.
 
we had already fought 3 wars with treaty in place. because after the war you may lose the case and will be forced by the ICJ to compensate.

I am not an legal expert. I am quoting from your own law Minister. According to him, in an event of a war all agreements between countries can become null and void, however, if there is no war, India cannot withdraw from the IWT unilaterally without huge legal costs. I don't know why India didn't opted out of IWT in the last 3 wars, may be because it didn't want the common Pakistani to suffer.

There is a full interview of your law Minister in today's dawn newspaper. May be you can read that to get a full perspective.
 
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