Dushanbe:
By rejecting the weapon’s weapon, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif warned on Friday that Pakistan would not allow India to cross the red line by holding the Indus Waters Treaty in accordance and danger of millions of lives of narrow political gains.
“India’s unilateral and illegal decision to keep into the Indus Waters Treaty, which controls the division of the Indus basin’s water, is deeply regrettable. Millions of lives must not be held hostage to narrow political gains, and Pakistan will not allow this. We will never allow the red line to be crossed,” said the prime minister, on Glaciers’ Preservation.
The conference participates in over 2,500 delegates from 80 UN Member States and 70 international organizations, including prime ministers, vice presidents, ministers and the UN’s assistant secretaries.
In his extensive address, the Prime Minister touched on all the relevant issues, including Glacial Preservation, Pakistan’s climate vulnerability, the floods of Pakistan, Global Climate Action and Responsibility, scientific projections on glacial melt, weapons of water and call to protect nature and humanity’s shared fate.
“The world today carries fresh scars from the use of conventional weapons in Gaza, which has left deep wounds. As if that were not enough, we are now witnessing an alarming new low – the weapon of water,” he told the international conference host of the government of Tajikistan in collaboration with the United Nations, UNESCO, WMO, the Asian Development Bank and other key partners as a historical moment of climate. International cooperation.
The 77 sessions in the United Nations General Assembly had declared through a decision 2025 as the international year of the glacier’s preservation, March 21 as the World Day of Glaciers, starting in 2025, and that the Government in Tajikistan will host the International Conference on the subject in 2025.



