India Slams Pakistan at UNSC
By R Anil Kumar
-
India slams Pakistan at UNSC over decades of Islamabad-backed terror
-
“Constrained to respond to the baseless allegations of the representative of Pakistan on a number of issues”: India’s Permanent Representative to the UN, Ambassador Parvathaneni Harish
-
Indus Waters Treaty still suspended despite India-Pak ceasefire
-
Indus Waters Treaty was suspended on April 23
-
India blames cross-border terrorism as key reason behind move, Says Pakistan blocked talks on Indus Treaty modification
New York. India on Friday, 23 May, slammed Pakistan at the UN Security Council, saying it has experienced decades of Pakistani sponsored terrorist attacks ranging from the 26/11 Mumbai attacks to barbaric mass murder of innocent tourists in Pahalgam, last month.
India’s Permanent Representative to the UN Ambassador Parvathaneni Harish made these comments while delivering a statement at the UN Security Council Open Debate.
I am constrained to respond to the baseless allegations of the representative of Pakistan on a number of issues, Harish said in his statement at the debate on the theme ‘Addressing emerging threats, ensuring safety of civilians, humanitarian and UN Personnel, journalists and media professionals and enhancing accountability mechanisms’ under the agenda item Protection of Civilians in Armed Conflict.
India has experienced decades of Pakistani sponsored terrorist attacks across our borders. This has ranged from the horrific 26/11 attack on the city of Mumbai to the barbaric mass murder of innocent tourists in Pahalgam in April 2025.
The victims of Pakistani terrorism have been predominantly civilians, since its objective has been to attack our prosperity, progress and morale. For such a nation to even participate in a discussion on protection of civilians is an affront to the international community, he said.
Tensions between India and Pakistan escalated after the Pahalgam attack, which claimed 26 lives.
India carried out precision strikes on terror infrastructure in Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied Kashmir in the early hours of May 7, following which Pakistan attempted to attack Indian military bases on May 8, 9 and 10. The Indian side responded strongly to the Pakistani actions.
The on-ground hostilities ended with an understanding on stopping the military actions following talks between the directors general of military operations of both sides on May 10.
Pak’s decades of terror, Pahalgam last straw: India on Indus treaty move at UN
In addition to repeated cross-border terrorism, factors such as energy requirements and dam safety led to India’s decision to place the Indus Waters Treaty with Pakistan in abeyance, India told the United Nations.
Indus Waters Treaty was suspended on April 23
India’s decision to place the Indus Waters Treaty with Pakistan in abeyance following the Pahalgam terrorist attack was the result of a well-considered process, driven by multiple factors, India said at the United Nations on May 23.
New Delhi specified that it was Pakistan, not India, that violated the 1960 water-sharing agreement.
Parvathaneni Harish, India’s Permanent Representative to the UN, dismissed the “disinformation spread by the Pakistani delegation” regarding the Indus Waters Treaty, highlighting key factors that led to the suspension of the treaty, also including repeated instances of cross-border terrorism, with the recent Pahalgam attack being the latest example.
“India entered into the Indus Water Treaty 65 years ago in good faith. The preamble of the treaty describes that the treaty was concluded in a spirit of goodwill and friendship.
Throughout the six and a half decades, Pakistan has violated the spirit of the treaty by inflicting three wars and thousands of terror attacks on India. In the last four decades, more than 20,000 Indian lives have been lost in terror attacks, the most recent of which was a dastardly targeted terror attack on tourists in Pahalgam last month,” the envoy told the Security Council.
He stressed that though Islamabad harboured terrorism against India, New Delhi has “shown extraordinary patience and magnanimity” throughout this period. “Pakistan’s state-sponsored cross -border terrorism in India seeks to hold hostage the lives of civilians, religious harmony, and economic prosperity,” he added.
According to Ambassador Harish, apart from regional security concerns, other factors, including India’s energy requirements and dam safety, also necessitated the decision.
“In these 65 years, far-reaching fundamental changes have taken place, not only in terms of escalating security concerns through cross-border terror attacks, but also growing requirements for producing clean energy, climate change, and demographic change,” he specified.
The UN diplomat pointed out to the Security Council that advancements in dam infrastructure technology have significantly improved safety and operational efficiency. However, some older dams continue to pose serious safety concerns.
“However, Pakistan has continued to block consistently any changes to this infrastructure and any modifications of the provisions which are permissible under the treaty.
In fact, in 2012, terrorists even attacked the Tulbul Navigation Project in Jammu and Kashmir. These cynical acts continue to endanger the safety of our projects and the lives of civilians,” he mentioned.
Additionally, India has formally asked Pakistan to discuss the modifications of the treaty on several occasions in the past two years, according to Harish. However, Pakistan continued to reject these and “Pakistan’s obstructionist approach continues to prevent the exercise of full utilisation of the legitimate rights by India”.
It is against this backdrop that India has finally announced that the treaty will be in abeyance until Pakistan, “which is a global epicentre of terror, credibly and irrevocably ends its support for cross-border terrorism”.
“It is clear that it is Pakistan which remains in violation of the Indus Water Treaty”.
The World Bank-brokered Indus Waters Treaty, signed on September 19, 1960, allocated the three eastern rivers–Ravi, Beas, and Sutlej–to India, and the three western rivers–Indus, Jhelum, and Chenab–to Pakistan.
While India was permitted limited, non-consumptive use of the western rivers, the treaty is widely regarded as one of the most successful transboundary water-sharing agreements in the world.
However, India suspended the treaty on April 23, following a terrorist attack in Jammu and Kashmir’s Baisaran Valley, which it blamed on Pakistan-backed elements. Although the nations reached an understanding to stop firing, the suspension of the water treaty continues.