India clarifies that the ceasefire with Pakistan is "conditional."

MADRID (EUROPA PRESS).- The ceasefire agreed this Saturday between India and Pakistan is "conditional" and does not currently imply the lifting of the diplomatic retaliatory measures adopted so far by the Indian government, including the suspension of a crucial hydrographic treaty, according to sources from the New Delhi authorities speaking to NDTV.
Sources from the Indian Foreign Ministry also confirmed to the Hindustan Times that "while the agreement represents a suspension of military activity, the remaining measures will remain in place, including the Indus Waters Treaty, which will remain suspended."
The agreement, signed in 1960 and considered an immovable diplomatic rock between two countries that are historical rivals, commits New Delhi to guaranteeing its neighbor access to the Indus River and two of its tributaries.
Pakistan, on the other hand, did begin to lift certain restrictions adopted during the clashes and fully reopened its airspace within hours of the announcement of an agreement brokered by the directors general of military operations of India and Pakistan, General Rajiv Ghai and General Kashif Abdullah.
The ceasefire was eventually announced, however, by US President Donald Trump, marking the provisional end to the crisis sparked by the April attack in Indian-controlled Kashmir, which left 26 civilians dead, mostly tourists.
Following this, New Delhi directly blamed Islamabad as responsible and launched attacks against the neighboring country, although Pakistani authorities have distanced themselves from the incident.
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