Islamabad, Pakistan – For the second time in three years, catastrophic monsoon floods have carved a path of destruction throughout Pakistan’s north and central areas, notably in its Punjab province, submerging villages, drowning farmland, displacing hundreds of thousands and killing a whole bunch.
This 12 months, India – Pakistan’s archrival and a nuclear-armed neighbour – can also be reeling. Its northern states, together with Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand and Indian Punjab, have seen widespread flooding as heavy monsoon rains swell rivers on each side of the border.
Pakistani authorities say that since late June, when the monsoon season started, at the least 884 individuals have died nationally, greater than 220 of them in Punjab. On the Indian aspect, the casualty depend has crossed 100, with greater than 30 useless in Indian Punjab.
But, shared struggling hasn’t introduced the neighbours nearer: In Pakistan’s Punjab, which borders India, federal minister Ahsan Iqbal has, in truth, accused New Delhi of intentionally releasing extra water from dams with out well timed warnings.
“India has began utilizing water as a weapon and has prompted wide-scale flooding in Punjab,” Iqbal mentioned final month, citing releases into the Ravi, Sutlej and Chenab rivers, all of which originate in Indian territory and move into Pakistan.
Iqbal additional mentioned that releasing flood water was the “worst instance of water aggression” by India, which he mentioned threatened lives, property and livelihoods.
“Some points needs to be past politics, and water cooperation have to be considered one of them,” the minister mentioned on August 27, whereas he participated in rescue efforts in Narowal metropolis, his constituency that borders India.
These accusations come amid heightened tensions between India and Pakistan, and the breakdown of a six-decade-old pact that helped them share waters for rivers which can be lifelines to each nations.
However consultants argue that the proof is skinny to recommend that India might need intentionally sought to flood Pakistan – and the bigger nation’s personal woes level to the dangers of such a technique, even when New Delhi have been to ponder it.
Weaponising water
Flood-affected individuals stroll alongside the shelters at a makeshift camp in Chung, in Pakistan’s Punjab province, on August 31, 2025. Almost half 1,000,000 individuals have been displaced by flooding in jap Pakistan after days of heavy rain swelled rivers [Aamir Qureshi/AFP]
Relations between India and Pakistan, already at a historic low, plummeted additional in April after the Pahalgam assault, during which gunmen killed 26 civilians in Indian-administered Kashmir. India blamed Pakistan for the assault and walked out of the Indus Waters Treaty (IWT), the transboundary settlement that governs the Indus Basin’s six rivers.
Pakistan rejected the accusation that it was in any manner behind the Pahalgam assault. However in early Might, the neighbours waged a four-day battle, concentrating on one another’s army bases with missiles and drones within the gravest army escalation between them in nearly three many years.
Underneath the IWT, the 2 nations have been required to change detailed water-flow knowledge commonly. With India now not adhering to the pact, fears have mounted in latest months that New Delhi may both attempt to cease the move of water into Pakistan, or flood its western neighbour by means of sudden, giant releases.
After New Delhi suspended its participation within the IWT, India’s Dwelling Minister Amit Shah in June mentioned the treaty would by no means be restored, a stance that prompted protests in Pakistan and accusations of “water terrorism”.
However whereas the Indian authorities has not issued a proper response to accusations that it has chosen to flood Pakistan, the Indian Excessive Fee in Islamabad has, within the final two weeks, shared a number of warnings of potential cross-border flooding on “humanitarian grounds”.
And water consultants say that attributing Pakistan’s floods primarily to Indian water releases from dams is an “oversimplification” of the causes of the disaster that dangers obscuring the pressing, shared challenges posed by local weather change and ageing infrastructure.
“The Indian resolution to launch water from their dam has not prompted flooding in Pakistan,” mentioned Daanish Mustafa, a professor of crucial geography at King’s Faculty London.
“India has main dams on its rivers, which finally make their technique to Pakistan. Any extra water that will probably be launched from these rivers will considerably influence India’s personal states first,” he informed Al Jazeera.
Shared monsoon pressure
Each Pakistan and India rely upon glaciers within the Himalayan and Karakoram ranges to feed their rivers. For Pakistan, the Indus river basin is a lifeline. It provides water to a lot of the nation’s roughly 250 million individuals and underpins its agriculture.
Pakistan’s monsoon floods have pushed the nationwide dying toll previous 800, with a whole bunch of hundreds of individuals displaced from their properties because of surging water [A Hussain/EPA]
Underneath the IWT, India controls the three jap rivers – Ravi, Sutlej and Beas – whereas Pakistan controls the three western rivers, Jhelum, Chenab and Indus.
India is obligated to permit waters of the western rivers to move into Pakistan with restricted exceptions, and to supply well timed, detailed hydrological knowledge.
India has constructed dams on the jap rivers it controls, and the move of the Ravi and Sutlej into Pakistan has significantly lowered since then. It has additionally constructed dams on a number of the western rivers – it’s allowed to, beneath the treaty, so long as that doesn’t have an effect on the quantity of water flowing into Pakistan.
However melting glaciers and an unusually intense summer season monsoon pushed river ranges on each side of the border dangerously excessive this 12 months.
In Pakistan, glacial outbursts adopted by heavy rains raised ranges within the western rivers, whereas surging flows put infrastructure on the jap rivers in India at critical threat.
Mustafa of King’s Faculty mentioned that dams – like different infrastructure – are designed conserving in thoughts a secure capability of water that they’ll maintain, and are usually meant to function for about 100 years. However local weather change has dramatically altered the common rainfall which may have been taken into consideration whereas designing these initiatives.
“The parameters used to construct the dams at the moment are out of date and meaningless,” he mentioned. “When the capability of the dams is exceeded, water have to be launched or it would put your entire construction vulnerable to destruction.”
Among the many main dams upstream in Indian territory are Salal and Baglihar on the Chenab; Pong on the Beas; Bhakra on the Sutlej; and Ranjit Sagar (often known as Thein) on the Ravi.
These dams are based mostly in Indian-administered Jammu and Kashmir, Indian Punjab and Himachal Pradesh, with huge areas of Indian territory between them and the border.
Blaming India for the flooding in Pakistan is not sensible, mentioned Shiraz Memon, a former Pakistani consultant on the bilateral fee tasked beneath the IWT to watch the implementation of the pact.
“As an alternative of acknowledging that India has shared warnings, we’re blaming them of water terrorism. It’s [a] easy, pure flood phenomenon,” Memon mentioned, including that by the top of August, reservoirs throughout the area have been full.
“With water at capability, spillways needed to be opened for downstream releases. It is a pure answer as there is no such thing as a different possibility obtainable,” he informed Al Jazeera.
Politics of blame
Stranded pilgrims cross a water channel utilizing a makeshift bridge the day after flash floods in Chositi village, Kishtwar district, in Indian-administered Kashmir final month [Channi Anand/AP Photo]
In accordance with September 3 knowledge on India’s Central Water Fee web site, at the least a dozen websites face a “extreme” flood state of affairs, and one other 19 are above regular flood ranges.
The identical day, Pakistan’s Ministry of Water Assets issued a notification, quoting a message from the Indian Excessive Fee, warning of “excessive flood” on the Sutlej and Tawi rivers.
It was the fourth such discover by India after three earlier warnings final week, however none contained detailed hydrological knowledge.
Pakistan’s Meteorological Division, in a report on September 4, mentioned on the Pakistani aspect, two websites on the Sutlej and Ravi confronted “extraordinarily excessive” flood ranges, whereas two different websites on the Ravi and Chenab noticed “very excessive” ranges.
The sheer quantity of water throughout an intense monsoon typically exceeds any single dam or barrage’s capability. Managed releases have turn out to be a needed, if harmful, a part of flood administration on each side of the border, mentioned consultants.
They added that whereas the IWT obliged India to alert Pakistan to irregular flows, Pakistan additionally wants higher monitoring and real-time knowledge methods somewhat than relying solely on diplomatic exchanges.
The blame recreation, analysts warn, can serve short-term political functions on each side, particularly after Might’s battle.
For India, suspending the treaty is framed as a agency stance in opposition to what it sees as Pakistan’s state-sponsored terrorism. For Pakistan, blaming India can present a political scapegoat that distracts from home failures in flood mitigation and governance.
“Rivers reside, respiration entities. That is what they do; they’re all the time on the transfer. You can not management the flood, particularly a excessive or extreme flood,” educational Mustafa mentioned.
Blaming India gained’t cease the floods. However, he added, it seems to be an “straightforward manner out to relinquish duty”.