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Tensions are rising between India and Pakistan over Indus water sharing. India is considering stopping water flow to Pakistan ...
NEW DELHI (ANI)- India is closely monitoring China’s plans to develop hydropower projects on the Brahmaputra River ... The proposed dam on the Yarlung Tsangpo River in Tibet is expected to ...
Mizoram Chief Minister Lalduhoma chaired the first meeting of the High-Level Task Force on the Northeast Economic Corridor, ...
It could prompt China to block the Brahmaputra River, which supplies around 30 percent of India’s fresh water and about 44 ...
A senior aide to Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has warned that India's suspension of the Indus Waters Treaty (IWT) could set a dangerous precedent, potentially prompting China to take reciprocal ...
Turning off the tap until the violence stops is the logical response when perpetrators drink at the victim’s well ...
Due to the treaty, India's plan to build dams to regulate waters from the western rivers to Pakistan have remained ...
The suspension is among several steps India has taken against Pakistan, accusing it of backing cross-border terrorism - a ...
The long-surviving treaty reached its end as a retaliation by India, who blamed Pakistan for the recent militant attack in ...
If the waters of the Indus are weaponized, Pakistan’s very fabric including economy, food supply, and stability will begin to unravel. And, in a region already riddled with fault lines such a ...
The tit-for-tat measures announced by India and Pakistan resemble a classic prisoner’s dilemma, where each side views escalatory retaliation as rational — even necessary — despite mutual harm.
From blocking inspections to reshaping dam rules, here’s what India’s Indus Treaty pause enables—and where its limits lie.