Farmers in Pakistan say their survival is at risk after New Delhi suspended the Indus Waters Treaty following a deadly attack by gunmen in India-administered Kashmir.
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00:00We are standing at the bridge of the river.
00:16We are standing at the bridge of the river.
00:21It is about 12 acres of the river.
00:25We are using this river.
00:27This is our gulzr-bacer, this is our gulzr-bacer, this is our gulzr-bacer.
00:57We are using the gulzr-bacer, this is our gulzr-bacer.
01:17We are using the gulzr-bacer, this is our gulzr-bacer.
01:22This is our gulzr-bacer, this is our gulzr-bacer, this is our gulzr-bacer, this is our gulzr-bacer, this is our gulzr-bacer, this is our gulzr-bacer, this is our gulzr-bacer, this is our gulzr-bacer.
01:50If there is a water bottle of water, it will be very good for us.
02:20It is not an exit class from the treaty, no single country can unilaterally walk out
02:45from the treaty, it cannot be terminated, there is no end line to it and that is the legal status.
02:52Well, conflict is never beneficial to anyone, conflict between countries is a lose-lose situation
03:00where both parties they lose. Overnight one cannot actually stop index water flow if it is disrupted
03:08or if it is interrupted, it would have huge implications if not in the short term, in the medium to long term.