Indus Waters Treaty Dispute Escalates to UN Security Council After India Suspends Pact
India’s suspension of the Indus Waters Treaty after the Pahalgam terror attack has triggered a global diplomatic escalation, with Pakistan approaching the UN Security Council. The decades-old water-sharing pact now faces uncertainty, raising concerns over regional stability and water security.
Islamabad has intensified diplomatic efforts to internationalise the issue. Pakistan’s Permanent Representative to the UN, Asim Iftikhar Ahmad, met UNSC President Jamal Fares Alrowaie and handed over a formal letter from Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar. The outreach signals Pakistan’s attempt to draw wider global attention to what it considers a serious escalation. In a statement, Pakistan’s UN mission said the Security Council had been urged to take note of the situation and call upon India to fully implement the Indus Waters Treaty, resume all cooperation and data sharing required under the treaty without delay, refrain from any coercive measures regarding water, and fulfil its international obligations in good faith.
The Indus Waters Treaty remains the backbone of water sharing between the two neighbours. It allocates the western rivers—Indus, Jhelum, and Chenab—largely to Pakistan, forming the lifeline of its farming sector. For decades, the agreement survived wars, military stand-offs, and political tensions. Its pause signals more than a policy shift, directly affecting everyday survival concerns in Pakistan.
India announced the suspension on April 23, 2025, a day after the Pahalgam terror attack that killed 26 people, most of them tourists. The attack was claimed by The Resistance Front, which has links to Pakistan-based terror networks. New Delhi justified its move by linking it to national security, stating that cooperation under such conditions was no longer viable and asserting that “blood and water cannot flow together.”
What was long regarded as a rare example of sustained cooperation between India and Pakistan has now entered an uncertain phase. Pakistan’s move to approach the UNSC underscores its push to widen the dispute beyond bilateral channels, while India continues to frame the decision as a response to persistent cross-border terrorism. For now, the treaty remains in suspension, leaving the future of one of the world’s most durable water-sharing arrangements hanging in the balance.

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