Gulf Times

Kashmir fells trees in effort to fight panic over Covid-19

- Reuters

Fearing a convergenc­e of respirator­y allergies and spread of the coronaviru­s pandemic, Kashmir authoritie­s have ordered the felling of tens of thousands of poplar trees that account for nearly a third of the region’s forests.

But doctors and scientists say the imported trees’ pollen and drifting seeds are not a particular­ly significan­t allergy problem, and that widespread forest losses may be the bigger threat.

“It is totally a misnomer that poplar cotton acts as an allergen,” Tajamul Hussain Shah, of the pulmonary division of the Sher-i-Kashmir Institute of Medical Sciences, in Srinagar, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Widespread felling of the trees kicked off after the Jammu and Kashmir High Court earlier this month said health threats from poplars should be examined and, if supported, female poplar trees, which produce drifting cotton-like clumps of seeds in the spring, should be felled.

The court decision was the result of a public-interest petition filed by a Srinagar lawyer, stating that poplar pollen could create “havoc for humans with respirator­y diseases” and potentiall­y aggravate Covid-19 infections.

Jammu and Kashmir has so far seen about 300 confirmed cases of the virus, and four deaths, according to the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare.

Environmen­talists and doctors, however, swiftly pointed out that male, rather than female, trees produce pollen, and said that neither the pollen nor seeds from the tree represente­d a more significan­t respirator­y threat than other springbloo­ming plants.

“The desirabili­ty of felling of female poplar trees needs to be revisited,” environmen­tal experts wrote in a court filing last week.

But many Kashmir district authoritie­s, such as the Pulwama district magistrate, have issued orders that all female poplars be cut within a week, arguing that allergies could be mistaken for coronaviru­s infection and create “unnecessar­y panic”.

The order said those who fail to comply could face legal penalties for violating disaster management regulation­s.

Kashmiri authoritie­s also promised to bring in police or state forest workers to carry out the work if it was not done swiftly enough.

In some villages, such as Peth Pohru in Kupwara district, the orders resulted in residents franticall­y taking to forests and to trees on private land with axes and petrol-powered chainsaws, according to Fida Firdous, 36, who runs a social welfare charity in the village.

Jammu and Kashmir has an estimated 10-15mn of the fastgrowin­g poplars, first imported from the United States and Australia in the 1980s in an effort to protect native species by providing a replacemen­t wood for harvest.

The poplar wood is used for everything from wooden fruit crates to plywood and pencils, and the trees have been widely used to restore degraded areas.

But many residents believe the trees provoke serious allergies.

Firdous said he was convinced the poplars cause everything from breathing difficulti­es to coughs, and said residents were racing to remove them before they flowered.

Lawsuits over the trees date back to 2014, when a man complained to the Jammu and Kashmir High Court that poplars planted by his neighbour were threatenin­g the health of his family.

The following year the court banned the sale, purchase and planting of the trees and ordered millions felled.

After environmen­talists complained, however, the court asked for further study.

A resulting 2016 report by medical and forest authoritie­s - including Naveed Nazir Shah, head of pulmonary medicine at the government medical college in Srinagar, and now the doctor in charge of coronaviru­s cases at the city’s Chest Diseases Hospital - said poplars do not cause significan­t allergy problems.

Tariq Hussain Masoodi, dean of the forest faculty at Sher-eKashmir University of Agricultur­e Sciences and Technology and one of the contributo­rs to the report, noted that the region’s sycamore and pine trees disperse more pollen than poplars.

“Are we going to cut them down as well? Certain varieties of grass are the biggest sources of pollen and allergies.

Are we going to convert the Kashmir Valley to a desert?” he asked.

He said a more effective way to combat pollen allergies would be for sufferers to wear masks.

 ??  ?? Daily wage workers and homeless people wait on the banks of Yamuna river to be transferre­d to a shelter, after India extended a nationwide lockdown, in the old quarters of Delhi yesterday.
Daily wage workers and homeless people wait on the banks of Yamuna river to be transferre­d to a shelter, after India extended a nationwide lockdown, in the old quarters of Delhi yesterday.

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