Srinagar, June 29 -- Pakistan's hydropolitics have long been entangled in tensions between its provinces, but few disputes have been as emotionally charged, historically rooted and politically consequential as the resistance emerging from Sindh over the proposed canal projects, most notably the controversial Chashma Right Bank Canal and others tied to the federal government's vision for agricultural expansion in Punjab and parts of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. As Pakistan grapples with climate stress, depleting water resources and demands of food security, the provincial dissent emanating from Sindh highlights a deep-seated mistrust of centralized water policymaking and a lingering fear of marginalization.Sindh, Pakistan's second-largest province ...