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Voluntary support from social, political and religious organisations has helped authorities in the Himalayan state of Jammu and Kashmir to put an abrupt end to illegal encroachments upon ecologically sensitive areas during the current ongoing bout of political violence. The entire Kashmir Valley has been on the boil following the killing of militant Burhan Wani in early July.
During earlier incidents of political violence in 2008 and 2010 – marked then, as now, by strike calls, curfews and clashes between government forces and protesters –hundreds of illegal encroachments had come up around sensitive environmental zones like the Dal Lake in the state’s winter capital Srinagar and in Pahalgam. There had been a massive jump in illegal felling of trees and timber smuggling.
This time, civil society appears to be aware that Kashmir’s environment suffers when the focus shifts to violence. Political and religious leaders as well as civil activists have promptly issued statements urging environmental protection. In some areas, they are personally involved in protecting forests and water bodies.
This time too, shortly after violent protests started, there were reports of encroachments in Dal Lake and illegal structures in ecologically sensitive Tosa Maidan and Dodapathri. Almost at once, prominent Kashmiri politician Mirwaiz Umar Farooq issued a strong statement asking the encroachers to stop their activities immediately.
Civil society members and religious leaders in Srinagar and many villages later assured government officials of full cooperation in dealing with encroachers and timber smugglers.
According to Malik, officials demolished 45 illegal structures around Dal Lake within a few days.
According to a paper, Impact of Urban Land Transformation on Water Bodies, Dal Lake has shrunk from 2,547 hectares in 1971 to 1,620 hectares in 2008.
An official who was part of the demolition exercise said that the statement issued by Mirwaiz and the support from local civil society members “certainly bolstered our confidence” as it meant the entire society was against those who were damaging the environment for their personal interests.
Irfan Rasool, Divisional Forest Officer (DFO) in Bandipora in Kashmir valley, said local community leaders in areas like Kenusa, Ashtengo and Chandaji were teaming up with forest guards to protect the forests, “as some unscrupulous elements find it easy during unrest to smuggle timber from forests”. Similar reports came from Budgam and Kupwara districts.
In the beautiful Kashmir valley, environmental problems have been traced to the partitioning of the Indian subcontinent into India and Pakistan in 1947 by scholar Jennifer Crook.
In a research paper, War in Kashmir and its effect on the environment, Crook wrote that the deployment of Indian and Pakistani armies in Kashmir in 1947 led to large scale poaching of rare species such as Ibex, Blue Sheep, Urian the big-horned sheep, antelopes and Snow Leopard.
Armed conflict returned to Kashmir and its fragile environment in 1989. Forests started to get denuded, water bodies began to be filled for buildings and wildlife came under threat.
According to senior officials of the district flood control departments in Anantnag and Pulwama, most encroachments on the banks of River Jhelum – Kashmir’s lifeline – came up between 1990 and 2005, when the violence was at its peak.
Forests were denuded all over the valley, especially in Baramulla, Budgam, Kupwara and the southern districts. Over half a million full-grown trees were cut down in a single forest from 1990 to 2010, according to villagers in Sitaharn in Budgam district.
As the residents of Kashmir endure another protracted period of political violence, they are hoping that the environment will be spared this time.
(This article was orignally published on India Climate Dialogue)
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