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  • 4/30/2025
Sukkur: Tensions between India and Pakistan over the suspended Indus Water Treaty have triggered deep fears in Sukkur, a city in Pakistan, where communities along the Indus River say they are fighting for survival.Local fishermen, who depend entirely on the river, are watching their livelihoods vanish. 37-year-old fisherman, Asif Ali, said, "We catch fish from the Indus River and sell them to make a living. If there is no water, how will we survive? We are sending a message to the people of India: if there is water, there is life. Without water, there is nothing."Ali Muhammad, 52, recalls the river's better days. "Ever since I became aware of things, there used to be a great flow of water in our river. We would go fishing and even visit the islands (tapus) in the middle of the river. There, we used to grow tomatoes, pumpkins, and various vegetables. Where there is water, there is life; without it, there is nothing."Urging international action, he said, "Both the government and the international community, including institutions like the World Bank, must act. Someone needs to tell India that this is not acceptable. Blocking water is an inhumane act. Our lives depend on the river."Nazar Muhammad, a 48-year-old boat rider, said, "We've been watching this crisis unfold for over 40 years. Even our elders never saw a situation as dire as what we are facing now. It's not possible to survive just with drought and dry years. The river is our only means of survival. And the way they've blocked the water, it's dangerously cruel." (With AFP Inputs)

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00:00In the city of Sukkur in Pakistan, a growing crisis is unfolding along the banks of the Indus River.
00:17As tensions rise between India and Pakistan following a deadly attack in Kashmir,
00:22India's suspension of Indus Water Treaty has sent shockwaves downstream.
00:27But, for the local fishermen and boatmen in Sukkur, this crisis is not about politics, it is about survival.
00:36One fisherman, Asif Ali said, we catch fish from the Indus River and sell them to make a living.
00:42If there is no water, how will we survive? If there is water, there is life.
00:48We have to catch our fish from the Indus River and sell them to make a living.
00:53They are now calling on the government and the international community to act to restore the river that sustains them.
01:11Ali Muhammad, a 52-year-old fisherman, pleads for international help, saying blocking water is inhuman.
01:17Someone must tell India, our lives depend on this river.
01:20As I was told, I had to realize that there was a lot of water in our deserts.
01:27We also wear a tapu in my deserts which are tapu in the deserts.
01:32Tomatoes,osaurus, phoops, etc.
01:35The water is a living life.
01:39There is nothing, for it is water.
01:40but what I can say is that this is the way that the Indian people have closed the water and the dams are very dangerous for us
01:49and the water is not going to happen
01:52It was already twenty twenty years ago, it was not water
01:56because the government and the world brother and world bank
02:01we need to explain something to India
02:06that this is not going to happen, you are also human, you are also human
02:10to stop water is a Yazidi work, don't stop water because there is a life with water
02:15Nazar Mohamed, a boat rider, adds
02:18we have been watching this crisis for forty years but it has never been this bad
02:23the river is our only source of life, without it we are nothing
02:28It is not that only with this happy year, our work is going to happen
02:34with the river is our connection, whether they are living in the cities
02:38or in the mountains, or in the trees
02:41except for the river, this is not anything
02:43and this river is our life
02:45and this river has become water, it has become very dangerous
02:49and this river has become more than 40 years
02:52and this river has never been water
02:55which is still happening
02:57for the people of Sukkur, the Indus river is more than water
03:01it is life, culture and survival
03:03and now it is vanishing

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