Excerpts relating to IWT
He {Omar Abdullah} said: “Both countries should revise the Indus Waters Treaty (1960) for the sake of Kashmir’s development. The treaty was signed a long time ago and both the countries need to re-visit its provisions and work out a formula under which Jammu & Kashmir can benefit by utilising the waters of its own rivers”. He was referring to a problem in Indian-occupied Jammu & Kashmir — relating to power production and irrigation — that is expected to gain the support of all Kashmiris across the divisions in the Muslim Conference and the more rebellious Hurriyat Conference.
Now something else is coming up at the regional level which should spur India and Pakistan not to create mischief for each other. They are both threatened by the region’s changing ecology; and Kashmir could be the axial factor in their solution of it. Climate change has decreased the water discharge from the catchment areas located in Kashmir. Ground-water levels down-river in Pakistan are declining at an alarming speed. “Separatist” provincial passions in Pakistan are raising their ugly head based on water. In Sindh, sub-nationalism is also based on the annulment of the Indus Waters Treaty.
An “independent” Kashmir too is bound to reject the Treaty, refusing to inherit it as a successor state. Pakistan should also keep in mind that an “independent Jammu & Kashmir” may include Azad Jammu and Kashmir. Those who look closely at the changing voices behind the “Kashmir cause” in Pakistan should have noticed the new emphasis on “waters” as the cause of next war between Pakistan and India. All lower riparians look with suspicion at the upper riparians and the hawks in Pakistan are threatening war — even a nuclear one — over them. International law actually accepts stoppage of water by the upper riparian as casus belli.
Therefore India and Pakistan need to normalise their bilateral equation in the near future and take another look at the problems that are already making Kashmir more complex than it was in the past. It is no longer the either/or handover of the territory to the wrangling states. New Delhi and Islamabad have to agree on a comprehensive programme against the changing climatic patterns and on the future energy map of the region which will be realistic only if the two states decide to become interdependent.