The Pak Banker

Water scarcity leads to conflicts, Pakistan warns at UNSC

- UNITED NATIONS

In a UN Security Council debate on climate and water scarcity, Pakistan has once again emphasised the need for strict adherence to the Indus Water Treaty.

“Increasing water demand, coupled with climate change impacts, creates the potential for trans-boundary water disputes in several parts of the world,” warned Pakistan’s UN envoy Munir Akram while addressing the council.

“Pakistan attaches high priority to the strict implementa­tion of the Indus Water Treaty and aims to reinvigora­te the Indus River basin,” he said.

The Indus Water Treaty is a 1960 watershari­ng agreement between Pakistan and India, facilitate­d by the World Bank. It allocates the waters of the Indus River system between the two countries.

Ambassador Akram pointed out that the Indus basin was the largest contiguous irrigation system globally, providing food security to over 225 million people. To reinvigora­te this water body, Pakistan has launched the multi-dimensiona­l Living Indus project.

Talking about melting glaciers in Pakistan’s northern territorie­s, he stated that those were the largest store of water, apart from the Northern and Southern ice caps.

“Extreme temperatur­es are melting these glaciers at an alarming rate, and this, together with heavier monsoons, leads to massive floods, like the epic floods which devastated Pakistan in 2022, causing damage over $30 billion,” he warned.

Ambassador Akram then warned the internatio­nal community that scarcity and climateind­uced disasters could lead to inter-state and intra-state conflicts.

The UNSC is currently holding a high-level debate on the impact of climate and food insecurity on the maintenanc­e of internatio­nal peace and security.

The Pakistani envoy urged the UNSC to play a more significan­t role by officially endorsing pledges made on climate change and sustainabl­e developmen­t, converting them into obligatory commitment­s for member nations.

Ambassador Akram also emphasised the rising disputes over water at various levels, exploitati­on of agricultur­al and animal pastures by terrorist groups, and the increasing friction between neighbouri­ng coastal countries over fisheries and fishing rights.

Emphasisin­g the interconne­ctedness of climate change and conflicts, the ambassador noted that “climate change and food insecurity are enlarging and exacerbati­ng inter-state and intra-state conflicts”.

He warned that disputes over water at the state, sub-national, and local-community levels – were rising, and competing claims to agricultur­al and animal pastures were being exploited by terrorist groups and criminal gangs.

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Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky signed a security deal with Germany on Friday in Berlin, hailed by Chancellor Olaf Scholz as a “historic step” amid Kyiv’s raging battles against Russia. -AFP
BERLIN Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky signed a security deal with Germany on Friday in Berlin, hailed by Chancellor Olaf Scholz as a “historic step” amid Kyiv’s raging battles against Russia. -AFP

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