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The Fiqh of Musaqāt and the Indus Waters Treaty: A Jurisprudential Analogy for Transboundary Irrigation

The Indus basin is one of the most complex hydro-civilizational systems in the world. It nourishes hundreds of millions of people across Pakistan and India and has historically supported agrarian societies whose political stability depends upon the reliability of irrigation. Modern legal governance of this river system is primarily structured through the Indus Waters Treaty, brokered by the World Bank in 1960.

Yet beyond the framework of modern international law, Islamic jurisprudence offers conceptual tools that illuminate ethical dimensions of water governance. One particularly fruitful analogy emerges from the classical jurisprudential contract known as musaqāt.

This essay explores how the fiqh of musaqāt irrigation can serve as a moral–jurisprudential lens through which the Indus Waters Treaty may be interpreted and enriched.


1. Musaqāt in Classical Islamic Jurisprudence

Musaqāt is a contract in Islamic law in which a landowner entrusts a cultivator to irrigate and care for trees or orchards in return for a share of the produce. The doctrine developed within the classical schools of Islamic jurisprudence and is associated with precedents from the era of the Prophet Muhammad and early Muslim agricultural practice.

The key elements of musaqāt include:

  1. Shared benefit – Both parties receive proportional returns from the agricultural yield.
  2. Entrusted stewardship – The irrigator does not own the land but is entrusted with maintaining its fertility.
  3. Risk sharing – If crops fail, both parties share the loss rather than shifting all risk to one side.
  4. Ethical obligation – Irrigation must occur responsibly to preserve the long-term productivity of the land.

Historically, this contract allowed communities in arid regions to organize irrigation cooperatively. It created a framework where water management became an ethical partnership rather than a zero-sum extraction of resources.


2. The Structural Logic of the Indus Waters Treaty

The Indus river system includes six major rivers:

  • Indus
  • Jhelum
  • Chenab
  • Ravi
  • Beas
  • Sutlej

Under the Indus Waters Treaty, the rivers were divided into two groups:

Western Rivers

  • Indus
  • Jhelum
  • Chenab

Allocated primarily to Pakistan.

Eastern Rivers

  • Ravi
  • Beas
  • Sutlej

Allocated primarily to India.

The treaty created institutions such as the Permanent Indus Commission to manage disputes and regulate engineering projects. Remarkably, it has survived multiple wars and political crises, making it one of the most durable water treaties in the world.

However, the treaty was designed within a hydraulic-engineering paradigm typical of the mid-20th century. It focuses on division and regulation, rather than the deeper ethical philosophy of shared ecological stewardship.

This is where musaqāt becomes conceptually illuminating.


3. Musaqāt as a Jurisprudential Analogy for Shared Rivers

Although musaqāt traditionally governs orchards rather than international rivers, its underlying logic parallels the governance challenges of transboundary water systems.

1. Shared Custodianship

In musaqāt, the irrigator and landowner become partners in sustaining agricultural productivity.

Applied to the Indus basin, this suggests a philosophical reframing:

The rivers are not merely divisible assets, but shared ecological trusts whose productivity must be maintained jointly.

In this sense, both states resemble partners in stewardship rather than competing proprietors.


2. Ethical Limits on Use

Islamic jurisprudence contains a long tradition regulating water access. Classical jurists emphasized that water flowing in rivers is a common good (mubāḥ), meaning it cannot be monopolized to the harm of others.

Under a musaqāt-inspired interpretation:

  • Upstream engineering must avoid significant harm to downstream irrigation.
  • River flow must remain sufficient to sustain agriculture and ecosystems.

This principle resonates strongly with modern international law doctrines such as “no significant harm” in transboundary water management.


3. Risk Sharing in Climate Uncertainty

The Indus basin faces mounting pressures:

  • glacier retreat in the Himalayas
  • erratic monsoons
  • population growth
  • agricultural over-extraction

Under a strict treaty logic, each state protects its allocated share.

Under a musaqāt logic, however, risk is collectively managed. When environmental shocks reduce water availability, cooperative adaptation becomes morally obligatory.

This could translate into:

  • coordinated reservoir management
  • joint climate monitoring
  • shared drought contingency planning.

4. The Moral Economy of Water

In Islamic legal thought, water is not simply an economic resource. It carries ethical and spiritual significance.

The Qur’anic worldview emphasizes water as a divine trust sustaining life:

“We made from water every living thing.”

Within this framework, rivers become part of a moral ecology, not merely a geopolitical asset.

A musaqāt interpretation therefore emphasizes:

  • sustainability
  • justice between upstream and downstream users
  • protection of rural livelihoods.

4. Toward a Musaqāt-Inspired Hydro-Diplomacy

Applying the spirit of musaqāt to the Indus basin does not replace the existing treaty framework. Rather, it adds a layer of ethical jurisprudence grounded in a civilizational legal tradition deeply familiar to societies in South Asia.

Such an approach could encourage:

  1. Cooperative basin governance
  2. Ethical environmental stewardship
  3. Agrarian justice for irrigation communities
  4. Resilience to climate change

In practical terms, this might involve:

  • joint river ecology monitoring
  • shared flood-control infrastructure
  • collaborative groundwater management
  • basin-wide agricultural adaptation strategies.

5. A Civilizational Perspective

Large river systems historically produced civilizations because they required collective coordination rather than individual control.

The Indus basin is no exception.

By viewing the treaty through the ethical lens of musaqāt, a deeper insight emerges:

the river system functions like a shared orchard whose fertility depends on cooperation between its caretakers.

The philosophical shift is subtle but powerful.

Instead of asking who owns the water, the musaqāt framework asks:

Who is entrusted with its care, and how should the harvest of life it sustains be shared?

In an era of climate stress and geopolitical uncertainty, such a perspective offers a bridge between classical Islamic legal wisdom and modern hydro-diplomacy, encouraging a form of governance grounded not only in engineering and treaties but also in ethical stewardship of the living earth.


If you want, I can also expand this into a full legal theory paper titled “Hydro-Fiqh: Applying Islamic Irrigation Jurisprudence to Transboundary River Governance in the Indus Basin”, with sections on maqāṣid al-sharīʿa, Ottoman irrigation law, and comparative international water law.

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