
Sir Creek Dispute
- India’s Defence Minister cautioned that any “misadventure” by Pakistan in the Sir Creek area would be met with a “decisive response” that could change “history and geography.”
About Sir Creek
- Sir Creek is a fluctuating 96-km tidal estuary meandering through the marshy expanse of the Rann of Kutch in Gujarat.
- It marks the natural boundary between India’s Kutch district, Gujarat and Pakistan’s Sindh province before flowing into the Arabian Sea.
- Originally called Ban Ganga, it was renamed Sir Creek after a British surveyor during colonial mapping.

Significance of Sir Creek
- Maritime Boundary: The demarcation of the Sir Creek boundary directly impacts the delimitation of the Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZs) for both India and Pakistan.
- Control over natural resources: The region is believed to hold significant reserves of oil and natural gas. Control over the creek is crucial for delimiting the continental shelf, which is essential for exploration rights.
- Fisheries & Livelihoods: It supports fishing grounds vital for communities; ambiguity in boundary causes frequent arrests of fishermen.
- Environmental value: Sir Creek is part of the Indus delta ecosystem, home to mangroves, migratory birds, and marine life. Its ecological sensitivity makes it important not only for national claims but also for sustainable coastal conservation.
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Sir Creek Dispute
- The origin dates back to the 1914 Resolution between the Ruler of Kutch (then under the Bombay Presidency) and the Sindh government (under British India).
- India’s Claim: India considers the ‘1914 Bombay Government Resolution’ demarcation as only a guideline, citing the internationally accepted Thalweg Principle, which sets the creek’s mid-channel as the boundary since it is navigable most of the year, and insists on a bilateral settlement under the 1972 Simla Agreement.
- Pakistan’s Claim: Pakistan claims the entire creek, citing a 1914 Bombay Government Resolution that established the boundary along the eastern bank — the so-called Green Line — effectively placing the creek in Sindh.
- Pakistan states that the Thalweg Principle doesn’t apply to Sir Creek because it’s not navigable.
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