Pakistan in trouble by suspending the Sindh agreement! Shahbaz Sarkar’s new scheme for water collection

Even before the month of May falls due to intense heat, the entire country is in a state of panic. Various rivers have started drying up. Trahi Madhusudan Dasha of North India due to lack of water. And the same is the case in the neighboring countries of India without following the political boundaries. Pakistan next door is no exception. India has blocked the Indus water on it. India blocked the waters of the Indus due to the deterioration of diplomatic relations between the two countries after the attack on tourists in Pahalgaon exactly a year ago. That’s why the situation of Islamabad has become more pathetic. Pakistan could not have imagined that instead of entering the neighboring country and launching terrorist attacks, Pakistan would have to ‘die in the water’.

After the terrorist attack in Baisaran Valley last April, India made it clear that ‘blood and water cannot flow together’. However, for the past one year, Pakistan has been playing the ‘victim card’ regarding its position to the rest of the world. They are trying to get sympathy from other countries by alleging why India is not giving them ‘water’. New Delhi has temporarily suspended the Indus Water Sharing Agreement signed with Pakistan in 1960. Islamabad has claimed India’s move as a violation of the Vienna Convention. Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari also called a meeting in this regard. While talking about Indus water, Pakistan’s stance on supporting terrorism has been carefully implied. Zardari held this discussion on the country’s water situation last week.

A few days ago, India’s Permanent Representative P Harish said at a function organized at the United Nations on the occasion of the World Water Day, “Pakistan must protect the sanctity of human life before talking about protecting the sanctity of the agreement. There will be no talk of the Indus Water Sharing Agreement until Pakistan, the ‘hub of global terror’, corrects its behavior.” P Harish said, “India has always been a responsible state. But the sense of responsibility is double-edged. Pakistan must unconditionally shun terrorism as an instrument of its state policy. India also claims that Pakistan’s behavior is disrupting an event organized to mark International Water Day. The main objective of the event was to ensure safe water and sanitation for all and the UN Sustainable Development Goals. But both Pakistan’s agriculture and power generation are heavily dependent on the Indus water which has suffered in the past.” However, Pakistan has been carefully avoiding the issue of terrorism and trying to garner sympathy by claiming to be a victim of it.

Comments are closed.