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India raises Baloch issue at UN; Modi reviews Indus treaty

Blood and water cannot flow together, says PM Modi

- ARCHIS MOHAN & PTI

Responding to the public mood, Prime Minister Narendra Modi and the Union government on Monday continued to keep up the pressure on Pakistan but stopped short of indulging in war hysteria.

In New Delhi, Modi chaired a meeting to review the 56-yearold India-Pakistan Indus Water Treaty. “Blood and water cannot flow together,” he said, according to sources present at the meeting.

It was decided India would “exploit to the maximum” water of rivers that flow into Pakistan — Beas, Ravi, Sutlej, Indus, Chenab and Jhelum — in accordance with the 1960 pact.

In New York, in an 18-minute speech at the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA), External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj lashed out at Pakistan for exporting terror to India, referring to the recent attack at a forward army base at Uri in Jammu & Kashmir. Eighteen Indian soldiers were killed in the attack.

Swaraj said Pakistan was under the illusion that it would acquire Indian territory by engineerin­g terror attacks. “Pakistan should abandon this dream (of acquiring Kashmir). Jammu & Kashmir is an integral part of India and will remain so.”

For the first time, India raised the Balochista­n issue at the UNGA. Swaraj also brought up Pakistan’s role in perpetrati­ng the “worst form of state oppression” in its Balochista­n province.

She criticised Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif’s speech last week at the UNGA, where he accused India of human rights violations in Kashmir. Swaraj said “those who live in glass houses shouldn’t throw stones at others”.

In a reference to Jamaatud-Dawa chief Hafiz Saeed, the mastermind of 26/11 Mumbai terror attacks, Swaraj said there were nations “in our midst” where UN-designated terrorists roamed freely. She said countries that speak the language of terrorism, nurture it, peddle it and export it should be isolated.

Contradict­ing Sharif ’s claims that India has set impossible preconditi­ons on talks, Swaraj said. “Did we impose any preconditi­on when I went to Islamabad and agreed to begin the Comprehens­ive Bilateral Dialogue? Did we impose any preconditi­on when PM Modi travelled from Kabul to Lahore?” She said India attempted an unpreceden­ted “paradigm of friendship” with Pakistan over the past two years. In return, India was at the receiving end of the terror attacks at Uri and Pathankot. Swaraj said Bahadur Ali, an alleged terrorist in India’s custody, had revealed Pakistan’s complicity in cross-border terror. At the meeting in New Delhi on the Indus Water Treaty, it was decided to set up an inter-ministeria­l task force with a “sense of urgency”.

Attended by National Security Advisor Ajit Doval, Foreign Secretary S Jaishankar, the water resources secretary, and senior Prime Minister’s Office officials, the meeting also noted the Indus Water Commission can “only take place in atmosphere free of terror”. The commission has had 112 meetings so far. The meeting also agreed to review the “unilateral suspension” of 1987 Tulbul navigation project. The project was suspended in 2007.

Sources said India, an upper riparian state, has been very “generous” to Pakistan, a lower riparian state, sharing water as a “goodwill” gesture.

The government decided to expedite work on three dams — Pakal Dul, Sawalkot and Bursar — on the Chenab river.

Sources said under the treaty, water can be used to irrigate 9.12 lakh acres, which can be extended by another 4.2 lakh acres. India was only using it for 8 lakh acres.

 ?? PHOTO: PTI ?? Minister of External Affairs Sushma Swaraj speaks during the 71st session of the United Nations General Assembly at UN headquarte­rs on Monday
PHOTO: PTI Minister of External Affairs Sushma Swaraj speaks during the 71st session of the United Nations General Assembly at UN headquarte­rs on Monday

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