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Uncertainty looms as next round of water talks with India approaches

WASHINGTON: The next round of India-Pakistan water talks may be delayed or cancelled because of India’s refusal to accept arbitration.

World Bank offered to organise the talks in Washington next month. Pakistan not only wants the talks to be held as scheduled but is also seeking the World Bank’s arbitration as the guarantor of the Indus Waters Treaty.

Indian officials told reporters in New Delhi on Wednesday that India was against such negotiations and preferred them within the framework of the treaty.

Pakistan too recognizes the treaty’s role and disagrees with the Indian interpretation, which seeks to minimize arbitration.

The talks will focus on Kishanganga and Ratle hydropower projects over which Pakistan is seeking International Court of Arbitration through the World Bank.

Indian and Pakistani officials met in Islamabad and Lahore this week to discuss three Indian projects on the Chenab River that Pakistan fears would decrease the flow of water into its territory.

Water and Power Minister Khawaja Asif told reporters that talks on the Kishanganga and Ratle hydroelectric schemes would be held in Washington next month with the World Bank as the mediator.

But officials in New Delhi told Indian media that they had not received any formal news about the Washington meeting. They also said that India opposed Pakistan’s proposal for the bank’s mediation or arbitration and would prefer a neutral expert to review the two projects and give his or her opinion.

Pakistan says it wants a decision that is legally binding on both India and Pakistan and such a decision can only come from a court of arbitration and not from a neutral expert.

In September 2016, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi threatened to scrap the treaty after a terrorist attack killed 19 Indian soldiers. Pakistan warned that any such move would be a “declaration of war”.

Pakistan has repeatedly accused India of violating the treaty by building dams on the western rivers. India says that the treaty unduly favours Pakistan by giving it a greater share of water.

“The Pakistanis fear that India is trying to undermine the bank’s role as the repository of this treaty. Pakistan wants the World Bank to continue to play its role as the guarantor of the treaty,” an official source told media in Washington.

The source added that the World Bank first seemed interested in Pakistan’s proposal for arbitration over Kishanganga and Ratle projects but may opt out under India’s pressure.

Pakistan has also said that it wants a resolution “through the provisions of the treaty, in their letter and spirit”, and “not through India’s interpretation of the agreement”.

A similar meeting, held in November 2016, made little progress as India rejected the World Bank’s terms of reference because the terms favoured Pakistan’s demand for arbitration.

 

Courtesy www.dailytimes.com.pk

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