Jamaat-ud-Dawah chief and Mumbai terror attack mastermind Hafiz Saeed has warned India against scrapping Indus Water Treaty and stopping river waters of Pakistan.
“ If India stopped the river waters of Pakistan then there would be "blood in the rivers, " Hafiz Saeed said while speaking at a large Kashmir Conference rally at Faisalabad on Friday.
He further said that Kashmiri militants are giving a "befitting reply" to India at Akhnoor, Uri and other places in Kashmir.
"Indian army is responsible for the killing of 650,000 Kashmiri Muslims. Now the Kashmiri Mujahideen are giving a befitting reply to India at Akhnoor, Uri and other places. " he said.
He said the "Mujaheedin are destroying India". "India cannot stop them from carrying out their mission...It is not me alone but now Baloch people and other Pakistanis are with us," he said, adding Baloch leader Shahzain Bugti has joined hands with him.
Bugti, chairman of Jamhuri Watan Party, announced his support at the rally for the Kashmir cause saying Balochistan is with Kashmiri people.
"As many as 50,000 Baloch youth are ready to join the Kashmir freedom movement and waiting for Hafiz Saeed’s call," Bugti said.
"Participation of the leader of Bugti tribe in Kashmir Conference is a message to India that Baloch are joining the Kashmir freedom movement," he said.
The alleged mastermind of the 2008 Mumbai attack also criticised Prime Minister Narendra Modi, saying if India stopped the river waters of Pakistan then there would be "blood in the rivers".
India has been, since the escalation of tensions after the Uri attack, indicating its intention to revisit the Indus Water Treaty.
On November 25, Prime Minister Narendra Modi had said that waters of Sutlej, Beas and Ravi rivers "rightfully" belong to India will be stopped from going "waste" in Pakistan.
"We will stand with Kashmiris for Kashmir's freedom as Pakistan is incomplete without it," he said.
Saeed who has a bounty of USD 10 million on his head hailed former Pakistan army chief Gen Raheel Sharif's appointment as head of a 39-country Islamic military alliance.
(With PTI inputs)