Thursday, 30 June 2022

1873’s Srinagar

Son of a British army officer, Henry Walter Bellew (August 30, 1834 – July 26, 1892) was a doctor and East India Company’s top Afghanistan expert. In 1873, he was despatched to Kashgar and he spent August in Srinagar, understanding its people and ruler, Maharaja Ranbir Singh. In the first of the two-part series, Bellew details his journey from Baramulla to Srinagar and the people living around

The Sherghari Palace that Afghans built on the banks of the Jhelum river in Srinagar was their seat of power. The photograph taken in the Dogra era shows Maharaja’s Royal Barge waiting in the river.

Soon after our arrival at Pattan we received a visit from Diwan Badri Nath, a high official of the Kashmir court, who, on the part of his Highness the Maharaja, welcomed us to Srinaggar, and delivered the friendly messages he was charged with an innate suavity and politeness of manner quite charming in themselves, and the more appreciable, because they were not mere empty words, as the arrangements for the comfort of our march thus far abundantly proved.

In the afternoon I accompanied Colonel Gordon to return his visit, and next morning they rode off together in advance to select a site for our camp, which is to halt some days at Srinaggar to equip our men and cattle with warm clothing for the journey across the passes. We followed with the camp next morning, and on arrival at the river-bank below the city were met by Pandit Hira Nand, chief of the city police, who was awaiting us with one of the Maharaja’s state barges to convey us by water to the Nasim Bagh, where Captain Biddulph’s party was camped.

Captain Chapman and I accordingly took our seats on the chairs set for us under the canopy of the pinnace, and were paddled up to our destination by thirty boatmen, whilst the camp, crossing at the first bridge, followed the land route, and joined the advance party under Captain Biddulph, whose camp we found pitched on the shore of the Dall lake, under the shade of the plane trees of the celebrated park here laid out by the Emperor Akbar the Nasim Bagh.

The trip up the river was a very agreeable change, particularly in the gorgeous and swift conveyance which had been so very thoughtfully provided for us, for the march was a long one, and the sun nearing the meridian was growing uncomfortably strong. And it was no less interesting on account of the excellent river view of this remarkable city which we were enabled to enjoy from the shelter of the open pavilion in which we were seated. It was an oblong chamber built up in the centre of the boat, and highly decorated in that intricate pattern peculiar to the artists of Kashmir, and so well-known for that marvellous blending of colour which, without disturbance of harmony amongst all, presents a groundwork of either according to the light in which it is viewed. The shallow vaulted roof was supported midway by pillars which divided the chamber into two compartments and at the sides by others which were fitted for shutters to close the whole when necessary.

The weather being fine we found these last had been removed, and consequently, the roof, supported on its pillars alone, formed a canopy or pavilion open on all sides above the panel of the basement.

The scene on either bank, as one is borne along through the midst of the city, is bewildering by the variety and the novelty of the sights that catch the eye at every turn; yet there is a sameness that pervades the whole, and characterises it as essentially local.

The succession of bridges, under whose spans of creaking and trembling logs for arches they are not to be called our boat was shot with a speed against stream hardly less than that of the more humble craft coming down with it, are all members of one family; each a singular repetition of the other, and all alike in their tumbledown look, and peculiar structure, and decayed appearance. The boats, too, which float amongst them, our own not excepted, in all their different sizes and various fittings, are of one shape and one resemblance.

Whether it be the light and painted state-barge, or the ponderous and unadorned rice-boat; whether it be the swift pinnace with its elegant canopy and many paddles, or the more leisurely travelling-boat, with its mat roof and mud-built cooking range; or whether it be the skiff of the fisherman and fowler or the punt of the market-gardener and caltrops-picker, they are all of one pattern and one build a flat keel less bottom, straight rib less sides, and tapering ends that rise out symmetrically fore and aft, prow and stern alike for advance or retreat.

Of such form, these boats are well suited for the conveyance of heavy burdens on a smooth stream; but they are most dangerous craft on rough water. From the wide hold they take of the water they gain buoyancy in respect to freight, but they lose it in the matter of riding. Instead of rising over the waves they present an obstacle over which they break, and the surf pouring over the low sides soon swamps the vessel.

The natives rarely venture far away from shore in heavily-laden boats, and when crossing the Wolar lake usually coast along its sides so that, if perchance caught by one of the squalls which so often sweep its surface, they can run as to a safe port into the belt of weeds bordering its shores; for here the water-lily, duckweed, and caltrops, with other aquatic plants, cover the water with a continuous spread of broad leaves which float on the surface and prevent its being disturbed by the wind.

An 1864 photograph taken by Samuel Bourne shows the ‘First Bridge’ of Srinagar with the Palace in its background. The (Sherghari) Palace uses Burza roof. The photo is part of British Library collections.

The mass of houses built on the masonry embankments which rise out of the water on either hand and display here and there amongst the varied components of their structure the chiselled blocks of some ancient palace or temple, incessantly draw the eyes from side to side by the attraction of some new form, and present a spectacle no less novel in character than strangely diverse in its uniformity as a whole.

The gable roofs, with their untidy thatch of beech bark and their attic lofts open at both ends, rest so insecurely upon the loose-jointed frame of upright poles they cover that they seem ready to fly away with the first gale of wind, and certainly constitute the most peculiar feature of the architecture everywhere. Whether on the king’s palace or the peasant’s cottage, on the merchant’s store or the mechanic’s shop, or whether on the Hindu’s barrack or the Musalman’s mosque, this draughty log-built roof is the same in character on all.

The edifices it surmounts present a greater variety of structure, though in all except in the palaces and Hindu temples, which are built throughout of solid masonry the framework of upright poles fixed upon a raised platform of masonry forms the skeleton. This framework is held together by cross-trees and rafters and closed in, tier above tier, either by a planking of rough-split logs or a thin wall of bricks and mortar. The interior partitions are of lath and plaster, and the compartments are lighted very much less than they are ventilated as many a tourist in the “Happy Valley” must have discovered to his cost in comfort by those lattice windows, so rich in the variety and elegance of their designs, which are, with the carved woodwork of the portals, the most agreeable features of Kashmir architectural decoration; so far at least as exterior appearance is concerned, for the matter of interior comfort is quite another consideration, and dependent for its merits upon the views or means of the occupants.

Glass windows are unknown out of the palaces and the mansions of the wealthy. The lattice window supplies their place, and how inefficiently may be readily understood when one learns that the only device adopted for keeping out the wind is a sheet of paper pasted over the fretwork, whilst the cold air pouring in over the open coping is considered out of reach and submitted to as a matter of course.

The very general use of timber for house-building in Kashmir, and the loose putting together of the beams and logs, is said to be necessitated by the frequency of earthquakes in the country. It seems, however, that other causes are not without potent influence in determining the preference. And notably the character of the people for physical inactivity, a trait, which is exemplified in the nature of all their industries.

A 1902 photograph of Dargah Hazratbal in Srinagar.

Their shawls and embroideries, their silver work and papier-mache-painting, their stone-engraving and woodcarving, &c., all alike exhibit proofs of wonderful delicacy and minute detail, but tell of no active expenditure of muscular force. Where this is required, as in house-building, we find it exercised only to the smallest extent absolutely indispensable for the attainment of the object desired. Hence, though stone is abundant and more durable, the easily-felled and floated timber is put together in a style of unfinish altogether independent of adaptation to stability under the conditions assigned.

Doubtless the humid character of the climate and the soft nature of the soil may have their share of influence, which must not be overlooked. But with the relics of ancient edifices of ponderous stone and the existing buildings of substantial masonry before us on the spot, these conditions, it would appear, offer no serious obstacle to a more finished and substantial style of architecture to that which is in vogue here. Such as they are, however, the houses of Srinaggar constitute the most prominent feature in the view of the city as seen on the way up its stream. And more special objects amongst them are the new houses rising on the river frontage very welcome signs, in their elaborate finish and straight angles and neat lines, of the march of civilisation and adoption of modern improvement ; the lofty piles of its principal mosques topped with those peculiar belfry-like towers supported mid-roof testimonies to the architect’s recognition of the dictates of taste as superior to the claims of conventional form; and those shapeless little idol temples of stone and mortar which, though in the front rank on the river’s bank, would be passed unnoticed but for the glare of their tinsel and gilt incongruous objects in this quaint jumble of woodwork structures. It remains to fill in the picture with man, whose presence and activity enliven the scene and complete the speciality of its character. In a city so well situated as a centre for the trade of the countries beyond the passes, one might naturally look for the representatives of the different surrounding regions amidst the crowd of its inhabitants, but they are not to be found or at least they do not appear amongst the moving forms that pass before the eyes of the mere traveller in anything like the number expected.

As it is, the familiar forms of the Afghan and Sikh, met here in so frequent recurrence, claim no such interest from us as do those of the people the one ruled in this valley not so very long ago, and the other rules at the present time. Nor do the few members of those little known tribes of the outlying districts of Dardistan, Baltistan, and Bhotan who are found here as government servants, more than excite a transient curiosity amidst the crowd of natives which more fully attracts the attention. It is the Hindu Pandit and the Musalman Kashmiri who are the chief actors in that busy scene of life and activity which at this season meets the eye at every turn in the river’s course.

An early last century photograph showing the Kashmiri Pandit book writers in Srinagar. Photo: Internet

The Pandit, or Batta as he is styled by his Muhammadan brother, if not recognised by the nicer distinctions of manner and speech, or the difference in dress and occupation, may be at once distinguished by the paint-marks carefully set on the forehead as the tokens of his religious purity.

He is seen as the well-to-do merchant, with a party of his fellows passing up and down the stream, seated on the matted floor of the Srinaggar gondola, in animated chat on the concerns of his business; his comfortable form bulging between the tight strings of his spotless linen, and enveloped in the loose folds of his soft warm shawl. Or he is found en dishabille performing his ablutions, immersed at the edge of the current under which his shaven head, with its lank crown-top lock, bobs now and again as he gabbles through the formula of his prayers; his hands the while, held up to the sun, pouring back to the river the drops they had raised from it, or quickly passing through the fingers the threads of janeo, which encircles his body; unmindful alike of the presence of the stranger or the proximity of his womankind the reputed fair Panditani who (the latter),  in like undisguise, may be disporting herself in the same element, or, concealed within the ample folds of her shapeless gown, may be washing her linen or filling her pitcher at the brink. Or else he is observed as the Brahmin priest his withered and emaciated form divested of all covering but the indecent loin-clout seated on his hams cooking his simple fare of unleavened cakes and pottage, and guarding scrupulously the purity of the spot sanctified for the operation; or, seated cross-legged at the door of his temple, he is reciting the shastar with a volubility equal to the swaying to and fro of his body; or else, motionless and silent, he is absorbed in a trance of meditation, or more probably of mental torpor and abstraction. Or lie is seen, writing-case and paper in hand, as the civil functionary the scribe, the notary, or the tax-collector in the pursuit of his special avocation, or, as the corn chandler, on the river-barges superintending the discharge of rice into the government granaries, or its sale to the people.

Kashmir artisans working on their shawls in Srinagar in 1870.

The Kashmiri, or Kashuri as he styles himself, constituting the bulk of the population, presents a greater diversity of ranks and occupations. These, from the barely clothed cooly and poverty-stricken peasant to the richly clad merchant and wealthy proprietor, are all to be seen in the course of a tour through the water-way of the city. The silversmiths, lapidaries, papier-mache artists, shawl-weavers, silk embroiderers, and other artificers are, of course, only to be seen to advantage in their workshops on either side of the river.

Here we are concerned only with the scene on its banks, and they consequently need no further notice in this place beyond the mention of their general resemblance in outward appearance to the Hindu portion of the population, from whom they are sometimes, in the absence of the paint-marks; tika, only to be distinguished by the different folding of the turban.

A 1920 photograph showing two women talking in a houseboat Shikara

The special actor on the river- scene is naturally the boatman. His lithe, active form bared for the task is seen everywhere as it bends to the rapid strokes of his paddle; and his merry voice, too often raised in unseemly wrangle and vociferous vituperation, is heard above all other sounds. His family, who live in the boat with him, are seen variously occupied upon the banks; the children remarkable for their bright eyes, and soft, pleasing features disporting themselves on the limited planking of their homes moored alongside; whilst the mother and elder daughters are busy on the beach in that laborious and unsightly task of husking their daily modicum of rice. The loose-sleeved and very roomy shift, which, like a long nightshirt, covers the body from neck to foot, and forms, with the characteristic cap of red fillet, their only dress jerking up and down as their arms ply the pestle upon the grain is not the least strange sight of the many that here amuse the visitor. And this particular one, from the awkwardness of the implements the pestle being nothing but a pole of wood rounded at each end, and the mortar a mere cup excavated in a clumsy log of the same material suggests reflection on the apathetic character of the people, who with such an easy command of water-power can tolerate so burdensome a task.

It was through such a scene as this, the main features of which I have attempted to delineate by words that we passed on our way to the Nasim Bagh. The last part of our route wound through that series of canals which intersect the swamps lying between the city and Dall lake. They are at this season nearly choked by the abundance of the water-weeds that shoot up from their shallow bottoms to mature their fruit on the surface, and wither and rot; whilst their tangled meshes obstruct the passage, and poison the air with the stench of the mephitic odours evolved from the festering mass of their luxuriant foliage.

An early twentieth-century photograph showing a group of extremely beautiful Kashmiri women, disempowered and in poverty. The photograph has been taken in the Kashmir periphery.

Between these narrow channels are small blocks of water-logged land, on which stand the log-huts and orchards of the market gardeners who supply the city with vegetables. They rise little above the level of the water, and are divided by cross trenches into fields, or plots whose banks are lined by rows of willows. Between these banks, which are further supported by stakes, and raised above the general level by heaps of the decayed weeds drawn from the bottom of the canals, the little skiffs of the cultivators ride their way over the mass of reeds concealing the passage from the eye of the stranger, and thus pass from one end to the other of this pestiferous tract of a labyrinthine swamp.

The produce of these gardens are cucumbers, melons, pumpkins, and tobacco, and that of the canals and shores of the lakes which is spontaneous are the water caltrops or singhara the fruit of which forms an important item as a breadstuff in the food products of the country, and is under government protection and the nidar, or root-stalk of the water-lily (whose beautiful pink flowers are the panpawsh of the Dall lake) which is largely consumed as a vegetable. Passing beyond these canals, we entered the circular pool, called the Dall, by one of those clear passages between the reed beds which stretch across its centre, and came upon the floating gardens.

These are formed of strips of decayed weeds which have been fished up from the bottom of the lake by means of a pole dexterously twisted amongst their long fibres.

They are staked to the bottom where they float by long poles, and are covered above with small heaps of earth in which the melon seed is sown. They are capable of supporting the weight of two or three men at a time; but great caution is necessary to prevent the feet breaking through their flimsy, rotten structure.

On the lake we found a number of little skiffs, each with its single occupant, dotted about the surface.

Here, in the line of our route, were two or three weighed down with the pile of weeds their owners were poling up from below for the repair of their floating melon beds, or maybe for the formation of a new one. There, along the shore, were a whole bevy of women, each paddling her own canoe with the one hand, whilst the other was rapidly plucking the duckweed that overspreads the surface, and throwing it into the hollow behind her with an eager haste, as though there was not enough to meet the wants of all. It is a favourite fodder for cattle, and is said to improve the milk of kine fed upon it. Further away, on the calm, open surface of the lake, rode motionless three or four boats as if moored to so many stakes, whilst the occupant of each, reclining crouched up, composed himself, head resting at the post, for a mid-day nap. Their occupants were fishermen, and far from asleep, were watchfully looking down the shaft of the narits or harpoon they poised in one hand to spear the first fish passing beneath its prongs.

We now came abreast of the handsome mosque of Hazrat Bal, the favourite resort of holiday folks, and passing its village, and the long array of bathing-closets half submerged in the waters of the lake, were presently landed at our camp a little beyond. Here, on the 4th August, we rejoined our comrades who preceded us from Murree.

An 1869 photograph showing H W Bellew (L) in durbar at Amballa (Punjab).

Shortly after our arrival in camp, Wazir Ram Dhan made his appearance, attended by a long retinue of servants bearing the various comestibles of the dali or “entertainment” sent by the Maharaja. The Wazir set them in array on the turf in front of Colonel Gordon’s tent, and welcoming us to Kashmir in the name of His Highness, made the customary health inquiries, and expressed a hope that the arrangements made for our march were such as met approval.

The dali comprised a number of sheep and fowls, and dozens of great pottery jars of rice, and flour, with sugar, tea, fruits, and spices, and butter and kitchen stuff of sorts in liberal proportion. They were disposed of in the usual manner that is, for the most part, shared amongst our servants and our visitor dismissed with compliments and grateful acknowledgements to his master.

(The passages were excerpted from Kashmir And Kashghar – A Narrative of The Journey of The Embassy To Kashghar In 1873-74 by H W Bellew published by Trubner & Co in 1875.)



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Night Temp Rises In Kashmir, Falls In Jammu

SRINAGAR: Night temperature recorded an increase at most places in Kashmir Valley and dropped in Jammu region on Friday even as weatherman has forecast possibility of light to moderate rains in next few days.

Quoting a meteorological department official news agency GNS reported that light to moderate rain in spells, especially in morning hours was likely at scattered places of J&K, especially in Jammu region during next 4-5 days.

Meanwhile, he said, Srinagar recorded a low of 23.6°C against 22.4°C on the previous night. The temperature, he said, was around 7°C above normal during this time of the year for the summer capital.

Qazigund recorded a low of 21.6°C against 21.6°C on the previous night. The temperature was 6.0°C ‘below’ normal for the gateway town of Kashmir, he said.

In Pahalgam, the mercury settled at 17.2°C against 15.4°C on the previous night in famous resort in south Kashmir.

Kokernag recorded a low of 19.1°C against 19.6°C on the previous night while Gulmarg recorded a low of 14.0°C against 13.6°C on the previous night, the official said.

Kupwara town saw a low of 21.1°C against 19.6°C on the previous night, the official said.

Jammu, which received 3mm of rain in the last 24 hours till 0830 hours today, recorded a low of 24.1°C against 26.2°C on the previous night, the official said.

The temperature was around 2°C below normal for J&K’s winter capital, he said. Banihal recorded a low of 0.0°C, Batote 18.5°C, Katra 22.0°C while Bhadarwah had a minimum of 20.8°C, the official said.



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CRPF Trooper Shoots Self, Hospitalised

SRINAGAR: A trooper of Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) was injured after he shot himself with his service rifle in Gund area of Ganderbal district on Friday morning, officials said here.

Quoting an official the news agency KNO reported that the trooper (name withheld) from Reasi, who shot himself today morning, was posted at CRPF Headquarter Gund.

He said that soon after the incident, he was rushed to SDH Kangan, where doctors referred him to SKIMS Soura for specialised treatment.

The official said that police have taken cognisance of the incident.



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Two Women Among 4 Amarnath Yatris Injured In Road Mishap

SRINAGAR: Four Amarnath pilgrims, who were on way to the holy cave shrine in south Kashmir Himalayas, were injured in a road accident in Banihal area of Ramban district on Friday morning, officials said.

Quoting an official the news agency KNO reported that a tempo vehicle carrying the pilgrims turned turtle on Srinagar-Jammu national highway near Sherbabi area of Banihal at around 06:00 am, resulting in injuries to four passengers.

He said that the injured were taken to SDH Banihal, where their condition is said to be stable.

The have been identified as Kundan Kumar from UP, Vinayak Gupta, Anita Gupta, and Gudiya—all residents of Chhattisgarh.



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Active Covid Caseload In India Crosses One-Lakh Mark After 4 Months

SRINAGAR: India reported 18,819 new Covid cases in a span of 24 hours, which is a considerable rise from the previous day’s count of 14,506, taking the caseload to over one lakh-mark after a gap of four months, said the Union Ministry of Health and Family Affairs.

In the same period, the country reported 39 more Covid deaths, taking the nationwide death toll to 5,25,116.

The active caseload has also surged to 1,04,555 cases, accounting for 0.24 per cent of the country’s total positive cases. The last time the active Covid caseload crossed the one lakh-mark was on February 28 when it reached 1,02,601.

The recovery of 13,827 patients in the last 24 hours took the cumulative tally to 4,28,22,493. Consequently, India’s recovery rate stands at 98.55 per cent.

Meanwhile, India’s daily positivity rate has also surged to 4.16 per cent, while the weekly positivity rate in the country currently stands at 3.72 per cent.

Also in the same period, a total of 4,52,430 tests were conducted across the country, increasing the overall tally to over 86.23 crore.

As of Thursday morning, India’s Covid-19 vaccination coverage exceeded 197.61 crore, achieved via 2,57,19,005 sessions.

Over 3.66 crore adolescents have been administered with a first dose of Covid-19 jab since the beginning of vaccination drive for this age bracket. (IANS)



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Active Covid Caseload In India Crosses One-Lakh Mark After 4 Months

SRINAGAR: India reported 18,819 new Covid cases in a span of 24 hours, which is a considerable rise from the previous day’s count of 14,506, taking the caseload to over one lakh-mark after a gap of four months, said the Union Ministry of Health and Family Affairs.

In the same period, the country reported 39 more Covid deaths, taking the nationwide death toll to 5,25,116.

The active caseload has also surged to 1,04,555 cases, accounting for 0.24 per cent of the country’s total positive cases. The last time the active Covid caseload crossed the one lakh-mark was on February 28 when it reached 1,02,601.

The recovery of 13,827 patients in the last 24 hours took the cumulative tally to 4,28,22,493. Consequently, India’s recovery rate stands at 98.55 per cent.

Meanwhile, India’s daily positivity rate has also surged to 4.16 per cent, while the weekly positivity rate in the country currently stands at 3.72 per cent.

Also in the same period, a total of 4,52,430 tests were conducted across the country, increasing the overall tally to over 86.23 crore.

As of Thursday morning, India’s Covid-19 vaccination coverage exceeded 197.61 crore, achieved via 2,57,19,005 sessions.

Over 3.66 crore adolescents have been administered with a first dose of Covid-19 jab since the beginning of vaccination drive for this age bracket. (IANS)



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Wednesday, 29 June 2022

Have Firm Belief Amarnath Yatra Will Be Successful, Peaceful: LG Sinha

SRINAGAR: Jammu and Kashmir Lieutenant Governor Manoj Sinha on Thursday said that he has a firm belief that the Amarnath Yatra, which began today, will be peaceful and will succeed by the blessings of Shri Amarnath Ji Baba.

Talking to a selected group of reporters today morning, as per the news agency KNO, Sinha said that by the blessings of Baba Amarnath Ji, the yatra will be successful and peaceful as well.

He said that pilgrims have come from across the country and he has a firm belief that every pilgrim will go back happily and everyone’s prayers are accepted.

Sinha also said that he prayed for the development, peace, and prosperity of Jammu and Kashmir, and the entire country.

Notably, Amarnath Yatra began today after the first batch of 2750 pilgrims left for the holy cave shrine from Nunwan base camp in Pahalgam amid unprecedented security measures.



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IAF Rescues Israeli National In Ladakh

SRINAGAR: The Indian Air Force (IAF) rescued an Israeli national from the Zanskar area of Ladakh, officials said on Thursday.

IAF Rescues Israeli National In Ladakh

The tourist was identified as Pnina Kuperman. She was in the area for trekking when she suffered breathing problems.

The Israeli national was evacuated by the helicopter unit of the IAF from a remote high-altitude village Hangkar. The rescue operation was carried out amid strong winds and adverse flying conditions.

Giving details of the operation, a defence spokesperson said, “On the evening of June 29, the pilots from the helicopter unit based at Air Force Station Leh, evacuated Pnina Kuperman, an Israeli national having difficulty in breathing, from a remote high altitude village called Hangkar in the Zanskar valley, braving strong winds & adverse flying conditions.”

The spokesperson said the patient was admitted to a local hospital and was stable now. (IANS)



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ECI Exercise Indicates Kashmir May Have Elections Soon

SRINAGAR: In an indication that elections could be held later this year or earlier next year, the Election Commission has ordered a special summary revision of electoral rolls in the Union Territory Jammu and Kashmir after a gap of three years.

In a letter to J&K’s chief electoral officer, a copy of which is in possession of news agency KNO the poll-body has directed that entire exercise of special summary revision shall be completed by October 31, 2022 with final publication of electoral rolls.

“Consequent upon amendment in Section 14 of the Representation of the People Act by Election Laws (Amendment) Act, 2021, as notified vide the Gazette of India notification No. 67, dated 30 December 2021 and corresponding changes in the Registration of Electors Rule, 1960 notified on 17th June, 2022, four qualifying dates, namely, 1″ January, 1″ April, 1 July, and 1 October are available in the law. In view of the reason explained in the preceding paragraph, the Commission has decided to order SSR, 2022 with respect to 01 October,

2022 which is the next qualifying date for preparation of electoral roll, after conclusion of the ongoing pre-revision activities,” reads the letter to CEO.

“Accordingly, the Commission has directed to carry out the revision activity for Special Summary Revision of Photo Electoral Rolls w.r.t 01.10.2022 as the qualifying date in UT of Jammu and Kashmir,” it further states.

The revision of electoral rolls couldn’t be undertaken in Jammu & Kashmir due to August 5, 2019 constitutional changes and delimitation exercise.

“I am directed to state that as per existing policy, revision of electoral rolls with reference to 1 January of the coming year as the qualifying date is done in later part of each year in all States/UTs (normally in the last quarter of a year) so that final publication of the electoral rolls could be made in the first week of January of the succeeding year. However, due to various administrative reasons, this annual revision of electoral roll could not be undertaken in Jammu and Kashmir after SSR, 2019. In the meantime, delimitation exercise of constituencies in the Union. Territory was also in progress and the finally delimited constituencies were notified by the Delimitation Commission on 05th May, 2022,” the letter states.

As per schedule announced by the ECI, the integrated draft electoral roll shall be published on September 01, 2019.

According to the poll-body, the claims and objections can be filed between September 01 to September 30 and they shall be disposed of by October 15.

The final publication of electoral rolls shall be done on October 31, the schedule states.

As per the letter, the CEO shall ensure that all activities of pre-revision exercises as prescribed in Commission’s letter dated 10.06.2022 shall be completed before draft publication of electoral roll.



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Amarnath Yatra Begins As First Batch Of 2,750 Pilgrims Leaves For Cave Shrine

SRINAGAR: Amid unprecedented security arrangements, the first batch of pilgrims left for holy cave from Nunwan base camp in Pahalgam area of Anantnag district on Thursday.

Quoting officials the news agency KNO reported that first batch of 2,750 pilgrims left for cave shrine, which was flagged off by DC Anantnag, Dr Piyush Singla.

Amarnath Yatra, which began today, is being held after two years as it remained suspended due to Covid-19 pandemic.

The 43-day Yatra will conclude on August 11 on the Occasion of Raksha Bandhan.

Yatris, who left for holy cave from Pahalgam were seen very happy, besides complimenting security and other arrangements by the administration.



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Campus Impact

Even though the Central University of Kashmir would take some more time in finding a permanent address to operate from, its campuses in Ganderbal are encouraging an economic change as people are exploring ways and means to improve their incomes, reports Humaira Nabi

After the campus of Central University, Kashmir started operating from Ganderbal, there are a lot of food vendors around to help feed hungry students and staffers. KL Image: Basit Jamal

A few kilometres away from noisy and crowded Ganderbal, in the tired old village of Tulmullah, life is a little slow. The earthy smell from a large paddy field tangoed with the musty odour of dumped cow dung along the roadside pervades the air. There is no hurry, few vehicles dart through the roads. However, the village is in process of being revamped after a few departments of the Central University of Kashmir initiated their functioning in the area. Cheap grocery stores set up by residents are a common site now. Street vendors and hawkers have taken over the pavements selling fruits, vegetables and street food.

A two-storied eatery, Mir Baba Hyder, adjacent to the university entrance has become a go-to place for the students and faculty members of the university. Run by two sisters-in-law, Daisy, 29, and Masarat, 25, the eatery has gone famous as Aunty ke chai.

 Tense Takeoff

The two young women initiated the eatery in 2018, when Daisy’s husband Nisar Ahmad Bhat, the lone breadwinner was unable to continue his profession of carpentry due to hypertension. Daisy along with Masarat took a loan of Rs 1.5 lakh from a self-help group and constructed a humble café to carry out their expenses.

“Our family went into financial crisis after my husband was advised by a doctor to discontinue carpentry for some time, as he suffered from hypertension,” Daisy said. “My elder daughter was supposed to get admitted to a private school but fate upended our plans. However, I refused to surrender to the circumstances. I always wanted my kids to get educated at a good school. So, I decided to work.”

Determined but apprehensive, Daisy took her sister-in-law into confidence and shared the idea of opening a tea stall near the University. They wanted a small piece of land on which they set up the small eatery. “My husband supported the idea, which boost our morale.”

Inside the eatery, the aroma of freshly fried samosas and chola, tickles the taste buds of bystanders. A radio set hung on the wall reverberates with Punjabi hip-hop. Daisy is pouring and serving tea to the customers, Masarat takes care of dishes while Dasiy’s husband looks after the finances.

Daisy, a housewife started a cafe outside the Central University Kashmir campus in Ganderbal and is happy that she was able to support her family. KL Image: Humaira Tabasum

“The establishment of the university in our area has helped in the financial improvement of many economically weak families like mine,” Bhat, now gradually coming out of hypertension, said. “Our kids are admitted in private schools. We anticipate a better future for them now, which otherwise was a distant dream.”

Modest Initiatives

Taking a lead from Daisy and Masarat, a couple of women from the surrounding areas have started small-scale businesses to lend a helping hand in earning a living for their families.

Shaheena Akhtar, 40, is a mother of three young children. Her husband is a daily wage worker whose income turned out to be too less to support his family. Two years after the Central University of Kashmir was shifted to Tullmulah, Shaheena with the help of her husband converted a small room of the house facing the roadside into a small provision store. She now, while taking care of her two-year-old daughter, the youngest one, in the shop, sells packed food items to the university students.

“Though I run at a very small scale and the margins are quite meagre but I am content with it as I am standing shoulder to shoulder with my husband to earn for our children,” Shaheena said.

There are many such small stories of struggle, hoping to be successes very soon. They see the campus as a huge intervention in their lives.

Paying Guests

Omar Abdullah laid the foundation of the varsity at Tulmullah, Ganderbal in 2009. For more than a decade now, the university has been changing its addresses almost on year on year basis as its permanent campus is still a distant dream. The Central University of Kashmir is currently operating from various rented accommodations across Ganderbal. With no hostel facility provided by the University authorities, students who are admitted to the varsity from across India are left with no choice but to go for off-campus accommodation. This has added yet another small income to the families who could spare some space to house the students.

Central University of Kashmir (CUK)

Taking advantage of the incompetence of the governance, the Ganderbal residents have provided rented accommodations and paying-guest services for the students.

Habibullah Bhat, 65, a retired employee of the Roads and Building Department, Kashmir, has rented out his old house for the students of the Central University of Kashmir. Female students from various districts including Kulgam, Baramulla and Kupwara are currently residing there. While the accommodation helped the students find a safe and secure place, the rent from each tenant has turned out to be quite lucrative for Habibullah.

What makes this income a godsend gift is that the family had moved to a better and bigger house and the old structure was gradually decaying. All of a sudden, this old house found its new inmates and the life revived. Otherwise abandoned, this started making money.

Nazima Farooq, 25, a first-year post-graduate student of Urdu is a resident of Bomai in Sopore. Habibullah has rented out his accommodation to Nazima, for almost a year. Nazima said that female students from distant areas are able to continue their studies only because of the presence of off-campus accommodation facilities made available by the residents.

“I have to pay a fare of Rs 400 to travel from Sopore to Ganderbal on a daily basis if I choose to shuttle between home and the classroom. It would be around Rs 10,000 for commuting alone,” Nazima said, insisting her modest background may ill-afford her education in that case. “I pay a rent of Rs 1500 per month and I am comfortable.”

New Incomes

Property owners across Ganderbal have opened up to the burgeoning paying guest culture. A good chunk of faculty members and students of the Central University belonging to distant areas prefer paying for guest accommodations because it being affordable and viable. With 24×7 internet, water and electricity supply at most PG facilities, the owners charge a fair amount for the services. Apart from generating new incomes, this culture is bringing people from various sub-cultures closer to each other. It helps them understand each other better.

Tahira Bano, 60, married off her youngest daughter, her fourth, in 2020. With no son, Tahira and her husband Peer Sirajudin were left alone in their two-storied home. While Sirajuddin went for work, Tahira would go to her neighbourhood friends to find solace; until a few Central University students visited her, looking for PG accommodation.

Central University of Kashmir (CUK) organise its maiden Convocation at Sher-e-Kashmir International Convention Centre (SKICC) Srinagar on Wednesday, July 4, 2018.
Kl Image by Bilal Bahadur

Tahira and her husband at once agreed and let out three rooms for them. Now she looks after the PG students as her own children, cooks and takes care of their needs. While the service helped Tahira and her husband get rid of loneliness, it has also them to earn a good amount of money at an age, she never thought of.

“Living in the vicinity of the university has proved to be a blessing for me,” Tahira said. “I get busy cooking and looking after the needs of these students. It is a win-win for us. They get a quality home-stay, while I managed my boredom and loneliness as I get busy working for them.”

The money that she earns each month makes her feel a little younger and ambitious, she admitted with a twinkle in her eyes.

“The couple has made us feel at home since day one. The privacy and homely food that we are offered here is rare,” said Masooda, an MEd student from Anantnag, who stays as a PG at Tahira’s home.



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India Reports 14,506 New Covid Cases, 30 Deaths

SRINAGAR: India reported 14,506 new Covid-19 cases in a span of 24 hours, which is a substantial increase over the previous day’s count of 11,793, said the Union Ministry of Health and Family Affairs on Wednesday.

In the same period, the country has reported 30 more Covid deaths, taking the nationwide toll to 5,25,077.

The active caseload of the country has also surged to 99,602 accounting for 0.23 per cent of the country’s total positive cases.

The recovery of 11,574 patients in the last 24 hours took the cumulative tally to 4,28,08,666. Consequently, India’s recovery rate stands at 98.56 per cent.

Meanwhile, India’s daily positivity rate has also surged to 3.35 per cent, while the weekly positivity rate currently stands at 3.30 per cent.

Also in the same period, a total of 4,33,659 tests were conducted across the country, increasing the overall tally to over 86.19 crore.

As of Wednesday morning, India’s Covid-19 vaccination coverage exceeded 197.46 crore, achieved via 2,56,78,429 sessions.

Over 3.65 crore adolescents have been administered with a first dose of Covid-19 jab since the beginning of vaccination drive for this age bracket.  (IANS)



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Youth Dies Of Suicide

SRINAGAR: A 16-year-old bread maker from Budgam dies of suicide in summer capital Srinagar on Wednesday, sources said.

Quoting sources news agency KDC reported that one minor boy name (withheld) a resident of Sugen Khag, was working as a bread maker in Bemina Srinagar, allegedly consumed some poisonous substances here.

The minor was immediately shifted to a nearby hospital where he was declared dead.

The body was shifted to his Khag residence for last rites after completing medico legal formalities.



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Tuesday, 28 June 2022

Woman Electrocuted To Death

SRINAGAR: A woman was electrocuted to death in Balpora area of South Kashmir’s Shopian district on Wednesday morning.

Quoting an official the news agency KNO reported that the woman received electric shock when she was cooking food on an electric heater and she died on the spot.

He identified the deceased as Tasneema Jan wife of Fayaz Ahmad Thoker of Balpora.

Meanwhile, police has taken cognizance of the incident and started inquest proceedings in this regard.



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Policeman Dies Of Cardiac Arrest

SRINAGAR: A policeman died of a cardiac arrest in Maisuma area of Srinagar on Wednesday morning, official sources said here.

Quoting official sources the news agency KNO reported that a 33-year-old cop identified as Altaf Hussain son of Nazir Ahmad of Tehsil Mohar of Reasi suffered a massive cardiac arrest and fell unconscious at Maisuma.

They said that he was rushed to SMHS hospital for treatment, where he was declared dead on arrival.

The deceased was posted aa constable at police station Maisuma.



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Monsoon To Arrive In J&K By July 1: MeT

SRINAGAR: Conditions are favourable for the southwest monsoon to advance into Jammu and Kashmir over the next 48 hours, the weatherman said on Wednesday.

“Conditions are favourable for the arrival of monsoon into J&K during 30th (June) -1st July,” news agency GNS quoted an official of the meteorological department as having said.

He said that the weather will be hot and dry throughout J&K today.

Regarding subsequent five days, he said, light to moderate rain were “very likely” at many places in J&K “mainly in plains of Jammu region.”

Meanwhile, he said, Srinagar recorded a low of 21.5°C against 19.0°C on the previous night. The temperature, he said, was 4.3°C above normal during this time of the year for the summer capital.

Qazigund recorded a low of 18.0°C against 15.8°C on the previous night. The temperature was 2.3°C ‘below’ normal for the gateway town of Kashmir, he said.

In Pahalgam, the mercury settled at 14.6°C against 13.2°C on the previous night. The temperature was 3.9°C above normal for the famous resort in south Kashmir during this time of the season, he said.

Kokernag recorded a low of 18.7°C against 17.1°C on the previous night. It was 3.4°C above normal for the place in south Kashmir during this time of the season, the official said.

Gulmarg recorded a low of 13.5°C against 12.0°C on the previous night, the official said. While 11.4°C is normal for the world famous skiing resort during this time of the season, the official said that the temperature was 2.1°C above normal for the famous place in north Kashmir’s Baramulla district.

Kupwara town saw a low of 17.7°C against 16.8°C on the previous night. The temperature was 2.3°C above normal for the district, the official said.

Jammu recorded a low of 31.2°C against 29.9°C on the previous night, the official said.

The temperature was 3.5°C above normal for J&K’s winter capital, he said. Banihal recorded a low of 20.8°C, Batote 21.3°C, Katra 29.0°C while Bhadarwah had a minimum of 20.0°C, the official said.



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Amarnath Yatra: LG Sinha Flags Off 1st Batch From Jammu

SRINAGAR: Lieutenant Governor Manoj Sinha on Wednesday morning flagged off the first batch of pilgrims for the annual Amarnath Yatra from the Bhagwati Nagar base camp in the Jammu city for their onward journey to the Pahalgam and Baltal base camps in Kashmir.

The 43-day pilgrimage to the cave shrine will begin from twin base camps in Kashmir on Thursday and will conclude on August 11 on the occasion of Raksha Bandhan.

The annual Amarnath Yatra is being organised after a gap of two years due to the Covid pandemic.

Amid chants of ‘Bam Bam Bhole’ and ‘Jai Barfani Baba ki’, the pilgrims left the Bhagwati Nagar base camp here in a convoy of vehicles amid tight security arrangements.



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Son Dies In Accident, Moments Later Father Dies Of Heart Attack

SRINAGAR: Tragedy befell a family in south Kashmir’s Anantnag district as news about the death of his son in a road mishap, resulting in the passing away of his father.

Motor cycle collided with a passenger cab on June 28,2022

Quoting officials news agency GNS reported that a motorcycle (PB07AK-1407) rider namely Arif Ahmed son of Abdul Rehman, a resident of Panchalthan Chittergul collided with a passenger cab (JK02AB 1227) near Panchthan Shangus this morning, resulting in critical injuries to the rider. He was subsequently removed to SDH Shangus, where the doctors declared him as brought dead on arrival, they said.

Back home, on hearing the news about the death of his son, the father, Abdul Rehman Wani, suffered a massive cardiac arrest. He was shifted to SDH Shangus, where he also was declared as brought dead on arrival.

Confirming the deaths of the father son duo, a police official said that a case under relevant sections of law has been registered into the accident involving death of the motorcyclist. “Both the bodies currently lie at SDH Shangus”, they added.



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Enabling Better Schooling

Poplars in Kashmir and the people in Pulwama have been acknowledged as key contributors to reducing India’s dependence on imports in managing the pencil deficit. But the enormous contribution that Jammu and Kashmir’s manufacturing and agricultural sectors make in enabling better schooling across the country is under-assessed and least-acknowledged, reports Masood Hussain

Today, Prime Minister, Narendra Modi, said in his Mann Ki Baat in October 2020, that Pulwama is playing an important role in educating the entire nation. “If the students across the nation do their homework, prepare notes, it is because of the hard work of the people of Pulwama,” Modi famously said. “Almost 90 per cent of the demand for pencil slate in the country is met by the Kashmir Valley. And Pulwama has a big share in that. At one time, we used to import the wood for pencils, but now, Pulwama is making the country self-reliant in this field.”

In a quick follow-up to the Pulwama’s importance to the school education in India – and most of the world, the then Chief Secretary, B V R Subrahmanyam started the basic spade work making pencil part of this south Kashmir district’s identity. Now the Commerce Secretary in Delhi, that basic work led to the declaration of Pulwama as a ‘pencil district’.

“It was an empowering development,” one pencil-maker said. Ookhu, the village, which is the epicentre of pencil making in Kashmir, was celebrated in news and politics. “But nothing much happened.”

“I am under intense pressure from the company that I must increase my raw material supplies four times,” Manzoor Ahmad Allie, the man who understood the Kashmir potential in having substantial stakes in pencil, the basic to school learning, said. He runs the Jhelum Agro Industries, the first unit, established in 2003, that actually gave birth to a chain of units in the area. “My problem is that I am unable to manage it because I require power supplies on a 24 x 7 basis.”

Kashmir’s famed poplar avenue is believed to have clicked in 1865

Contributions Not Assessed

People associated with the supply of ready-to-use raw material for the pencil-making chains insist that while Prime Minister’s public statement endorsed the Pulwama power in enabling proper schooling in India, the territory’s overall contributions have not been assessed. Unless it does not happen, one entrepreneur said, the problem they are facing on the ground shall remain untouched and unaddressed.

Jammu and Kashmir’s manufacturing sector is immensely contributing to the creation of an enabling school environment by manufacturing items, fundamental to better and modern education. This is beyond pencils. Kashmir and Jammu regions are equally contributing to this.

Manzoor Ahmad Allie, the resident of Ookhu in Pulwama was the first to understand the potential of poplar timber in pencil making. KL Image: Special Arrangement pencil

The Camlin Entry

The key opening for this sector started slightly ahead of the last major industrial package that the Vajpayee government announced. Stationary maker, Camlin (established 1931), now known as Kokuyo Camlin Ltd took a piece of land in Samba’s industrial estate and started its colours unit in a huge multi-story building with more than 200 workers, mostly women. With an initial investment of Rs 12.30 crore, the unit was up and running in September 2008.

Its production would go to the company’s wear-housing in Delhi wherefrom it would be marketed. The unit was substantially contributing to the company turnover.

Besides, the company took over the sick industrial unit in Gangyal industrial estate where it put in pencil slate making and wood seasoning unit. It started pencil making in November 2003. Put together, the two units would manufacture almost half of the 2100 products that Camlin markets. However, the Gangyal unit has ceased to work later for reasons not known.

Kangaro In Jammu

Not far away from the Camlin facility is a manufacturing facility of Kangaro Industries, a Punjab-based company, which is a major player in paper staples and home stationery. Almost 125 people are managing this facility.

Operating since 2011, it manufactures around 125 tons of stapler pins a month even though Jammu and Kashmir does not consume even one per cent of it. The unit actually makes staplers, staples, staple removers, paper punches, lever arch mechanisms, scissors, carbon papers, and pneumatic tools for the entire country. Most of the product base of the Ludhiana based company falls under school equipment, office supplies, and home and social stationery. The company markets its products under Kangaro, Kanin and Munix brands.

Old Pencils

However, pencils were being manufactured before the Kangaro and Camlin made their entry into Jammu and Kashmir. The Hindustan Pencils (established 1958), the main pencil maker of India, has been in Jammu since 1980. They started with one unit and gradually grew in numbers. Their operations started with a unit at Akhnoor Road which was later shifted to Bari Brahmana industrial area.

“We have four units operating in Jammu and they have more than 4000 people on its rolls,” Mayur Mehta, the Purchase Manager at Hindustan Pencils said. These include its oldest unit, the Sanghvi Woods, Apsara Plastics, and two units of Hindustan Pencils. “We have many units in Kashmir – in Ookhu and Lassipora – which work with us and we are keen to add more.”

The willow logs are being cut in proper sizes for pencil slates in delicate machines. KL Image: Bilal Bahadur

Hindustan Pencil manufactures the two most popular pencil brands, the Natraj and Apsara. Its entire Jammu manufacturing is dependent on the slates that are made in Ookhu and Lassipora.

Mayur said their company (pre-Covid19 turnover Rs 750 crore) sources almost 60 to 70 per cent of the raw material comes from Kashmir and the rest is accessed from coastal Kerala. “It is a huge labour-intensive sector and it requires a lot of human resources to keep the supply lines running. It is not an ordinary area of activity; it is about the education of our future so there are no compromises.” The company gets more than 1.50 crore pencils to market from its facilities in Jammu and Kashmir alone, every day for 24 days a month.

Of late, another pencil maker, DOMS (established 1975) has entered Jammu and Kashmir. It has a unit in Jammu but most of its finished products come from Haryana, to which semi-finished raw material goes from Pulwama and Jammu.

“There are four units that work with DOMS,” Nazir Ahmad, one of the suppliers to the company said. “Cumulatively, we might have around 150 employees in the four units of which three are in Lassipora. One unit that was working with the company in Sangam has closed but the one operating from Dogripora is functional.”

DOMS is offering stiff competition to the established players in the stationary sector. But its footprints in Jammu and Kashmir are much less than Hindustan Pencils, for instance. Insiders in the sector, however, insist they have a strategy in place to pace up in the coming days.

Major Sector

The income that the pencil-making raw material suppliers generate is not small. Being labour intensive, the sector requires a lot of people. Though the skilled lot is sourced from plains, more than half of the workers are locals and most of them are women. “It is modest but the cumulative turnover could improve,” Allie said. “It could actually increase four-fold if we get an improved power supply.”

When the almost-ready finished raw material reaches the manufacturing facilities in Jammu, the final products are made. A huge labour-intensive exercise, it also has impressive turnover. In 2021-22, the total turnover that pencil makers in Jammu recorded was upward of Rs 350 crore of which the Hindustan Pencils alone has more than 90 per cent share.

Not every piece cut by the band saw is worth a slate. It needs manual sorting by the skilled workers, mostly non-locals. KL Image: Bilal Bahadur

The raw material suppliers in Kashmir literally take the cost of the wood and the expenditures on its processing. Trade insiders said they had registered a cumulative turnover of around Rs 15 crore in 2017-18, which gradually rose to Rs 45 crore in 2019-20. Later, however, it fell to half but is now recovering. “We might have crossed a turnover of Rs 40 crore in 2021-22,” one insider said.

With the schools finally coming out of Covid19 and operating normally across the country, the pencil makers expect improved turnover. While the raw material supplies are about to cross a Rs 10 crore turnover in the first months of 2022-23, the pencil makers in Jammu are about to touch a Rs 100 crore turnover in Q1 of the current fiscal.

Challenges

The competition among the players may not have a huge impact at a time when their raw material base is under stress. The rise of Ookhu as Kashmir’s pencil village is not because of its enterprising people but because its identity is linked to its location. Pencil makers need soft, moisture-rich wood that is durable, too.

“We live in a sort of flood basin so the poplars we grow around meet the fundamental requirements of the student pencils,” Allie said. “It needs to be soft because a lot of children are used to biting it while writing or thinking in the classroom.” The other raw material base for the student pencils is the coastal area of Kerala, for the same reason because its wood also carries enough moisture.

Survived Axing

Poplar has remained a key cash crop and a huge raw material for veneer (plywood), apple boxes, roof topping and pencils. Kashmir produces two varieties of poplars – the traditional one that is endemic to the region and the Romanian variety that is locally known as Russian poplars (Populus deltoids). Unlike the endemic species, the imported variety grows faster as it has the least gestation period. Pencil makers prefer this variety as its raw material. Even though most of the plains grow poplars, it is the one grown in Kashmir’s wet soils that is the most preferred for pencil making.

Skilled workers at pencil village in Ookhu in south Kashmir are busy working in a factory that makes raw materials for the major pencil makers in India. KL Image: Bilal Bahadur

“Now the government is experimenting with a hybrid variety that has also least gestation period and its saplings were distributed among farmers a few years back,” Allie said. “Let us see how it grows and how it eventually helps the sector.”

The stakeholders had to put in a huge fight to help the poplar survive the axe of myopic policy-making. In 2014, a Srinagar resident approached the court against the pollen infection and the court asked the administration to ban the sale, purchase and cultivation of the imported variety of poplars under section 133CrPC. In 2015, in response to a series of half-baked news reports suggesting poplars are the alleged source of pollen infection, short-sighted officers ordered mass axing of the poplars in Srinagar to a level that poplar timber rates hit the bottom as supplies peaked. In 2016, when the court sought compliances from districts, two districts of Kulgam and Pulwama reported in their compliance note to the High Court that they chopped 600 thousand poplars. In 2018, the High of Jammu and Kashmir ordered the mass axing of poplars after declaring them a health hazard.

Poplars are central to the rural economy and an outcry forced scientists to investigate the issue only to find out that the poplar pollens are least infectious in comparison to the invisible pollens of various grasses, and tree species that the government was pushed to rethink by the court of law.

In 2017, the Chest Disease Department of the Government Medical College, Srinagar, suggested the levels of allergy varied among people – 92.7 per cent were found allergic to dust, 60 per cent to Chinar, 73.5 per cent to common grasses, 62.7 per cent to Pine. This was in tune with a chest medicine consultant Dr Naveed Nazir Shah’s finding that poplar stands at number six as a cause of allergy while dust remains at the top, followed by lawn grass, deodar, kikaar and Chinar. A year later, the SKUAST-K probe found that unfertilized seeds of poplars were non-allergy-causing in nature.

Economics apart, the poplar plantations are ecologically vital as these trees – like willows – are good carbon sequestration facilitators, and phytoremediation agents, which naturally clean up the soil, air, and water from chemicals, stream bank stabilizers, bio filtrates and soil erosion controllers.

During all these years, however, the ill-informed district administrators would continue ordering mass hacking of these trees. A similar situation cropped up in 2020 when the officials linked the spread of Covid19 to the mass infection spread by the pollens. At a high-level meeting, a top officer ordered mass axing. Estimates suggest Kashmir has almost 16 million poplar trees standing at any point of time. The counter-narrative on a scientific basis helped the courts to undo the mass felling orders, issued earlier.

“We are told that the new variety being introduced lacks the cotton-like pollens that dominated the atmosphere but let us see it,” Allie added.

Short In Supply

Poplar timber is more than Rs 1000 crore economy of Kashmir. Traditionally, it was hugely in demand for making tens of millions of boxes for apple, exported to the markets in plains, the introduction of the card-board boxes spared this material to a large extent. However, the successive mass feelings since 2015 have added huge stress to the requirement of poplar timber, a situation that would only be balanced almost after five years.

This, however, has put the pencil makers in direct competition with the plywood makers that required poplars for the veneer. “It is an uneven competition,” Mayur said. “We are producing something basic to the future generation and we cannot afford to make it costly because it kills the purpose.”

Nazir said the timber is getting so costly that it is getting out of hand for the pencil makers. “Till last year, we would purchase it at Rs 270 per square ft and now it is not available at Rs 330,” he said. “Unlike us, the poplar growers welcome the veneer manufacturers because they can afford raw material at any cost.” He said that if the rates continued surging the way they are, most of the units in Kashmir fear closure.

Trade insiders said they had their manufacturing facilities closed for two years because the Covid19-triggered lockdown and school closures had pushed pencil demand to an all-time low. Now when things are getting normal, they are facing raw material and energy issues.

Energy Crisis

The second challenge, Allie said, is that they lack dependable energy supplies to keep the supply commitments. “We have better power supply in Lassipora but the crisis is that if we drive our raw material to the industrial estate, we have to invest more than compromises our margins,” Allie said. “Most of the units operate within the village and locals own, run and man these facilities so the government must intervene and provide us a special feeder so that we put up more machines and hire more people.”

Power supply apart, Mayur’s worry is fading raw material. “I think the priority has to be to make enough raw material available because the demand within and abroad is increasing,” Mayur said. “I would hope the policymakers see it as a key requirement because it is about schooling – not business alone.”

There are other issues as well. Nazir said they had been suggesting the government to manage a buyer-seller meeting so that the possibility of exporting the pencil slates could be explored. “There are at least two major world manufacturers interested in purchasing slates but our request has not been taken in the right perspective,” Nazir regretted. “Do not we have the right to a better market?”

A Pencil Village

Official Position

“It is a niche sector and it is a priority,” Mehmood Ahmad, Director Industries, Kashmir said. “We have 17 units at Lassipora and Ookhu but most of them are in the unorganised sector.”

Mahmood Ahmad Shah (KAS)

Ahmad said managing a special feeder to the village may not be possible but all these facilities are available in the Lassipora industrial estate. “We have written to the Deputy Commissioner, Pulwama requesting him to identify a space where a special cluster of pencil-making units can be created. The day, we get this piece of land; we will work overtime to set up this sub-sector, somewhere around the area where the stakeholders want.”

Stakeholders Say

One Ookhu resident said that the government took away 180 kanals of land from them which they were cultivating for around 70 years. “I do not know what they want to do to this land but cannot it be possible that this vast stretch of land is dedicated to the poplar plantation and let the government do it,” the resident, who wants to stay anonymous, said. “This will create an uninterrupted raw material supply to these units and the government will continue earning money on a long-term basis.”

A unit holder said creating a new industrial estate for the pencil makers may not be viable because “we are not in a position to dismantle our existing infrastructure and recreate afresh”. He said the government must declare the village an industrial area and give “us the bare minimum support” so that we can take the production line to a new level. Allie said if the government improves only the power supply, he will triple the workers on his rolls within two months.



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Monday, 27 June 2022

‘Decide Within 1 Week’: Supreme Court To High Court On Plea Of Man Seeking Exhumation Of Son’s Body

SRINAGAR: The Supreme Court on Monday asked the Jammu and Kashmir and Ladakh High Court to take a decision, within one week, on a father’s plea to perform last rites of his son who was killed in “Hyderpora encounter” in Srinagar in November last year.

Senior advocate Anand Grover, representing Mohammed Latif Magry, submitted before a vacation bench of Justices Surya Kant and J.B. Pardiwala that his client will perform the last rites as per religious beliefs and emphasised that he has the right to perform the last rites

Grover clarified that he was not pressing on the exhumation of the body of the client’s son. He said his client wants relief regarding performing last rites and compensation. A single judge bench of the high court passed a direction regarding Rs 5 lakh but a division bench stayed it.

Noting that the matter is listed before the high court on Tuesday, the bench said: “We’ll request the high court to consider your prayer of alternative relief tomorrow or within 1 week… That much faith we have in the system.”

The bench, in its order, noted that the counsel for the petitioner wants to perform the last rites as per his religious practices at the graveyard where his son was buried. It said it requests the high court to consider the alternative relief either on Tuesday or within a week.

The top court order came on a plea by Magrey challenging the June 3 order by the division bench staying the exhumation of his son’s body.

Four people, including Aamir Magry, were killed in the “encounter” on the outskirts of Srinagar on November 15 last year.

The plea, filed through advocate Nupur Kumar, said: “The impugned interim order is in gross violation of Articles 21 and 25 of the Constitution of India, which uphold and protect right of the deceased to a decent burial by the next of kin following the religious ceremonies and practices.”

On the division bench order staying the single bench order for exhuming the body of Aamir Magrey and handing it to his family for last rites, the plea said: “The impugned order without assigning any reasons has stayed the operation of the judgment dated 27.05.2022, by merely observing that ‘the matter requires a final decision from this Court after hearing all the parties’, without appreciating that delay of each day in execution of the judgment of the Ld. Single Judge is resulting in the body of the deceased decomposing.”

The single judge asked the authorities to make arrangements for exhuming the remains of the deceased from the Wadder Payeen graveyard in the presence of Latief Magrey.

“It was further directed that if the body is highly putrefied and is not in deliverable state or is likely to pose risk to public health and hygiene, the petitioner and his close relatives shall be allowed to perform last rites as per their tradition and religious belief in the Wadder Payeen graveyard itself where the deceased is lying buried, and in that situation, the respondents shall pay the petitioner a compensation of Rs 5 lakh for deprivation of his right to have the dead body of his son and give him decent burial as per rites and customs,” added the plea. (IANS)



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DGP Dilbag Singh Responsible If Anything Happens To Me, Alleges Basant Rath

SRINAGAR: A 2000 cadre Indian Police Officer (IPS)  of the rank of Inspector General of police, Basant Rath who opted for voluntary retirement from services on Tuesday alleged that Director General of Police Dilbag Singh would be responsible if anything untoward happened to him.

Taking to social networking site Twitter, Basannt Rath wrote: “Dear friends, if anything bad happens to my reputation and safety, Dilbag Singh (son of Balbir Singh), the IPS officer who has been the police chief in J and K  since 31.10.2018 (Present Pay Scale – Level – 17), will be responsible.”

Born in 1972 in a village in coastal Odisha, Rath studied Sociology at Jawaharlal Nehru University.

Not new to controversies, Rath all along has his unique workstyle,  giving little consideration to the laid down norms.

Interestingly on June 25, 2020, Rath, a senior officer of the police had written a letter addressed to the Gandi Nagar police station in Jammu in which he had expressed apprehension about his safety due to “certain activities” of the department in which he was working at senior level. “I’m writing to you to take note of my genuine apprehensions about my safety and reputation. I am doing it as a private citizen of the country. In my personal capacity. Not as a civil servant. Not as a policeman,” he wrote.

The complaint he made was in the backdrop of nasty social media row with his boss, Director General of Police, Dilbagh Singh, a 1987 batch IPS officer.

Flamboyant Cop Basant Rath Leaves Police to Join Politics

Subsequently after two weeks of lodging complaint,  Rath was suspended by the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) for “repeated instances of gross misconduct and misbehaviour”.

Known for being blunt, in 2018, he had a verbal spat with incumbent mayor Junaid Azim Matto. As sources reveal, the fight became the reason for his shifting from the traffic department to the office of the commandant general, Home Guards Jammu.

However, soon after his suspension, “westandwithBasantRath” started trending on Twitter.



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Two Dead After Falling Off Roof

SRINAGAR: Two non-local labourers died after falling off roof of cold store of SIDCO in Lassipora area of South Kashmir’s Pulwama district, officials said here on Tuesday.

Quoting an official the news agency KNO reported that two persons fell off from the roof of cold store of SIDCO late last night and they were rushed to a nearby hospital, where they were declared dead on arrival.

He identified the duo as Ladau Kumar(18) son of Sukhari Kumar and Jugal Kumar (25) son of Kamal Kumar—both residents of Siwan Bihar.

Meanwhile, police have taken cognizance of the incident and started investigation.



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