ADVERTISEMENTREMOVE AD

Of Shrinking Wetlands & Looming Environmental Disaster in Kashmir

Wetlands in Kashmir are shrinking, and it could lead to devastating floods. 

Updated
India
3 min read
story-hero-img
i
Aa
Aa
Small
Aa
Medium
Aa
Large
Hindi Female

Hokarsar Wetland (Srinagar), May 8 (IANS): The sprawling wetlands in Kashmir have long served as nature’s first line of defence against an outbreak of violent floods the valley is so prone to. But the marshes are shrinking fast, increasing fears of a looming disaster similar to what it witnessed in 2014.

The decline has also robbed millions of Central Asian, Chinese and European winged visitors of their winter homes and habitat, posing an existential threat to the Valley’s fragile ecosystem.

Not only that. The economic importance of these wetlands has always been highly undervalued, experts told this correspondent.

ADVERTISEMENTREMOVE AD
Wetlands in Kashmir are shrinking, and it could lead to devastating floods. 
A Kashmiri fisherman rows his boat near a flock of migratory birds at Dal Lake in Srinagar. (Photo: Reuters)
0

“Wetlands all around the world matter a great deal to humans. Kashmir is no exception but we often fail to recognize their importance,” said Farooq Shah, a known green activist, who has been working and writing on Kashmir environment for the last nearly two decades.

ADVERTISEMENTREMOVE AD
Economic and environmental benefits apart, these wetlands also help offset terrible climate change impacts.
Farooq Shah, Environmental Activist
ADVERTISEMENTREMOVE AD

According to official records, the wetlands have largely fallen prey to paddy cultivation, plantation, and residential complexes. Shah attributed it to the human greed and an official apathy.

Official records reveal that nine Kashmir wetlands, despite being protected legally, have shrunk a great deal over the last 50 years.

ADVERTISEMENTREMOVE AD
Wetlands in Kashmir are shrinking, and it could lead to devastating floods. 
Migratory birds from Siberia rest on a wetland in Gharana village, about 30 km (19 miles) southwest of Jammu. (Photo: Reuters)
ADVERTISEMENTREMOVE AD

High pollution levels and blatant encroachments have wreaked havoc with its natural vegetation, leaving thousands of farmers in the lurch.

The growth of unwanted weeds, accumulation of silt, human and solid waste has drastically affected the growth of fish, water nuts and vegetables like lotus stems, officials said.

ADVERTISEMENTREMOVE AD

Imtiyaz Ahmad Lone, a wildlife warden, who looks after Hokarsar, blamed Jhelum flood basin for the “the devastation” because it “brings heavy volumes of silt and pollutants”.

Besides, “some industry houses have also been found dumping waste” on the wetland peripheries which have become permanent grazing sites for cattle and “dumping ground for household and industrial trash”, he said.

ADVERTISEMENTREMOVE AD
Wetlands in Kashmir are shrinking, and it could lead to devastating floods. 
A man crosses the Dal Lake. (Photo: iStockphoto)
ADVERTISEMENTREMOVE AD

The official said he personally has been persistently seeking a dredging machine to clear unwanted weeds.

ADVERTISEMENTREMOVE AD
I have been requesting the government to give me the machine for a few months. Got a negative response.
Imtiyaz Ahmad Lone, Wildlife Warden
ADVERTISEMENTREMOVE AD

He claimed the department has been acting tough against encroachers and, so far, more than 400 cases have been registered. He would not comment on a prosecution rate.

Shah, the environmentalist, said another flood in the valley would be more disastrous than in 2014 when large parts of Srinagar remained inundated for weeks together.

ADVERTISEMENTREMOVE AD
Wetlands in Kashmir are shrinking, and it could lead to devastating floods. 
A Kashmiri man rows a makeshift raft carrying a woman and a child through the flood waters in Srinagar, 20 September 2014. (Photo: Reuters)
ADVERTISEMENTREMOVE AD
We’ve sown the seeds of destruction and we’re just reaping the bitter fruit now. We lack a sense of ownership that largely has come from the instability in the region.
Imtiyaz Ahmad Lone, Wildlife Warden
ADVERTISEMENTREMOVE AD

(Javaid Trali is a Srinagar-based freelance journalist. He can be contacted at atharjavaid55@gmail.com)

(At The Quint, we are answerable only to our audience. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member. Because the truth is worth it.)

Read Latest News and Breaking News at The Quint, browse for more from news and india

Topics:  Kashmir   flooding   Wetlands 

Published: 
Speaking truth to power requires allies like you.
Become a Member
3 months
12 months
12 months
Check Member Benefits
Read More
×
×