Hydro-hegemony
Why this matters: local context for readers following news across Pakistan and the region.
DEPUTY Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar said on Thursday that at least 17 projects by India on waterways forming part of the Indus River System would give New Delhi the “tools for hydro-hegemony”. His statement has come at a time when water and the Indus Waters Treaty remain a contentious issue between India and Pakistan, following New Delhi’s unilateral suspension of the accord last year — a move that followed a brief military conflict between the two sides in May 2025. Dar’s key-note address was played at a seminar titled “Transboundary Water Resources: A Weaponized Global Common”, which was jointly organized by Pakistan’s embassy in Brussels and the Centre for European Policy Studies. The water issue is assuming dangerous dimensions and poses a serious threat to the peace, stability and progress of the region in view of declared strategy of India to use water as a weapon against Pakistan in clear violation of its obligations under the World Bank-brokered Indus Basin Treaty. Indian intents were highlighted by a recent statement of its Water Minister CR Patel who said his country was working to ensure “not a single drop of water” would flow into Pakistan. Time is passing quickly and Pakistan cannot afford to sit idly when India is comprehensively and effectively implementing a plan to deprive Pakistan of its share of water under the international treaty. One year has elapsed in a status quo and five to ten years down the road, Pakistan will start feeling the pinch of India’s water hegemony with serious consequences for its agrarian economy as well as hydel power generation. Therefore, the Foreign Office has done well by organizing a seminar in close coordination with the Centre for European Policy Studies, which will go a long way in sensitizing global opinion-makers about India’s designs and threats of India’s policy for regional peace as Pakistan has unequivocally declared that any attempt to change the flow of cross-border waterways would be conside