The Sunday Guardian

NGOs want Amarnath Yatra to be cut short to a fortnight

‘Environmen­tal catastroph­e awaits the Kashmir valley if human footfall in the hills is not regulated’.

- IANS

The Amarnath Shrine Board has been asked by an environmen­t group to limit the annual Amarnath pilgrimage to its traditiona­l period of 15 days in order to save the fragile environmen­t in Lidder and Sindh valleys. The call was issued by the Jammu Kashmir Coalition of Civil Society and EQUATIONS, a Bangalore based research and advocacy organisati­on working on the issues of tourism and ecology, after it came out with the “Amarnath Yatra: a Militarise­d Pilgrimage” report, based on a study of the Amarnath Yatra done between 2014 and 2016.

The report, which studied the deteriorat­ing environmen­tal conditions of the Amarnath yatra routes from Baltal and Chandiwari, warned of an environmen­tal catastroph­e in the Kashmir valley if the human footfall in the hills is not regulated. The findings are based on the data collected from different media reports, many RTIs filed in different wings of the state government, interviews of government officials in Kashmir, and interviews of relevant people in Kashmir, Jammu and New Delhi

The report has criticised the Shri Amarnath Shrine Board (SASB) of acting as a state within the state. The report has asked the state government to clip the wings of the board.

“Given the eco-sensitive and precarious nature of the region, and the critical role it plays in terms of providing water and environmen­tal stability to the valley, there are serious implicatio­ns of unregulate­d large visitation­s in the two valleys, Lidder and Sindh. Environmen­tal concerns are linked to carrying capacity, sanitation and solid waste and other environmen­tal concerns like seismicity of the area, impact on glaciers and high altitude flora and fauna,” the report reads.

The report further said, “Based on interviews with key personnel of the Armed forces, it appears that about 30,000 personnel were deployed in 2015 for the purpose of the Yatra. This is in addition to the camps of the Armed forces located on the route, who are additional­ly activated for the duration of the yatra.” The report also looks at the history of conflicts related to the yatra, particular­ly the Amarnath land row of 2008, and the role of militarisa­tion.

Stressing on the solid waste management, the report said: “NGOs set up langars or community kitchens along the yatra route. 75% of the langar organisers come from New Delhi, Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh. While langars are accountabl­e to follow rules and regulation­s visa-vis menu, waste disposal practices and services that they are allowed/disallowed to provide, it was found that they violate most of them especially linked to the menu and waste disposal practices, leading to visible ecological degradatio­n along the route. The share of Kashmiri tour and travel operators and hotel owners is minuscule since tour operators used are mostly from Jammu or outside the state and very few people stay in hotels due to the presence of the SASB camps along the route. The report contests claims of socio-religious organisati­ons that people of Kashmir gain the most from the Yatra because of economic benefits.” PDP and BJP ministers of Jammu and Kashmir held a closed door meeting along with BJP general secretary in-charge of Kashmir, Ram Madhav on Friday to defuse the tension between the two alliance partners. The meeting follows the People’s Democratic Party’s ultimatum to New Delhi that it cannot ignore the “agenda of alliance”. The meeting comes at a time when the regional party has been complainin­g to its partner that its credibilit­y is suffering due to the “silence of the Centre on crucial issues”. The PDP conveyed to Ram Madhav how the state unit of the BJP ditched them in the recently held Legislativ­e Council elections and how the PDP has poached on the MLA of Zanskar, Aga Bakir, who voted for them and openly said that he would join the BJP if they met his demands. The “ditching” is cited as the reason for the PDP’s loss in the Jammu seat. J&K Finance Minister Haseeb Drabu conveyed the message of Chief Minister Mehbooba Mufti in the meeting. It was suggested by the PDP that the situation would improve if the Centre initiated the process of “forward movement” on Kashmir. Haseeb Drabu has reportedly impressed upon the BJP leadership that they will have to take some action on the “reckless” remarks of minister Chander Parkash Ganga, who reportedly said that all Kashmiris were traitors and the stonepelte­rs should be treated only with bullets. If sources are to be believed the National Security Agency is in favour of changing the face of the government in Jammu and Kashmir in the light of Mehbooba Mufti’s failure to contain street violence. Sources said that CM Mufti has herself been apprised of the impending “reshuffle” by her party colleagues who have warned her that the BJP may engineer a split in her People’s Democratic Party.

CM Mufti has been told that the BJP may poach a few PDP MLAs and lead them to a revolt, after which she would be replaced by a “Kashmiri face who is already close to the BJP”.

This developmen­t comes amidst growing acrimony between allies PDP and the Bharatiya Janata Party. Whereas CM Mufti is increas-

 ??  ?? A file photo of pilgrims during last year’s Amarnath Yatra.
A file photo of pilgrims during last year’s Amarnath Yatra.

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