UN Experts Warn India Cross-Border Strikes May Violate International Law and Highlight Indus Waters Treaty Tensions

UN Experts Warn India Cross-Border Strikes May Violate International Law and Highlight Indus Waters Treaty Tensions
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According to UN human rights experts, India's reported cross-border strikes into Pakistan after the April 22 Pahalgam attack may violate international law.

A 17-page UN communication dated Oct 16 and made public on Dec 15 found India provided no publicly verifiable evidence linking Pakistan to the attack.

India did not notify the UN Security Council under Article 51 (self-defence), raising concerns over unlawful use of force and right-to-life violations.

Counter-terrorism actions must meet necessity, proportionality, and distinction under international law.

Experts expressed serious concern over India holding the Indus Waters Treaty in abeyance — the 1960 binding water-sharing treaty; unilateral suspension may breach international obligations.

Disruption of Indus waters could affect millions in Pakistan reliant on the river system for drinking water, agriculture, food security, and livelihoods.

Access to safe drinking water is a recognized human right; water should not be used as political pressure.

UN experts asked India to clarify the legal basis for military action, treaty suspension, and safeguards against humanitarian, environmental, and economic harm.

They also urged a peaceful settlement of the Kashmir dispute in line with international law and self-determination.

Video Journalist & Producer at Kabul News

Jawan Herat is a video journalist with Kabul News, one of the few outlets still producing visual reports from inside Afghanistan. Based in Herat, he specializes in subtle documentary-style reporting on daily life, economic hardships, and cultural preservation, navigating severe restrictions on media content to tell stories of resilience under the current regime.

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