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A Tribune Special India’s ‘paradise’ — Kashmir — is threatening to lose its charming picture postcard beauty. The danger has nothing to do with the separatists’ fight for ‘azadi.’ The deafening war cries for ‘azadi’ in Kashmir has led local players, their patrons across the border and the state authorities to ignore a ‘time bomb’ that may, in a few decades, convert the valley’s lush green fields and mountains into a barren desert resembling adjoining high-altitude Ladakh. The “time bomb” lies just a few kilometers from the Line of Control (LOC) — it is the Kolahoi glacier that is melting at an alarming speed, threatening to snatch away the beautiful green robe of the valley. It is the Kolahoi and other such glaciers’ waters that has made the valley lush green and fertile, leading the Kashmiris to proudly proclaim that “if there is heaven, it is where we live.” Located a short trek away from Pahalgam, this glacier is the valley’s only year-round source of water. The twin-peaked Kolahoi glacier, rising almost 18,000 feet (5,500m), is rapidly melting due to global warming. The base of the glacier is at the head of the Lidder valley. Climbing from 3400m up to 4000m, the glacier descends from twin majestic peaks at 5433m. In 1985, the glacier’s snout stretched half-a-mile (800 metre) further down the valley. The traces are still visible. Now, the snout is much smaller. Because of the close proximity of the LOC, the densely forest covered mountains and the valley around the glacier are an infiltration route for the terrorists sneaking over from Pakistan. This made the regular monitoring of the glacier unsafe. The Energy and Resources Institute (TERI) recently organised a research expedition of the University of Kashmir University to visit the glacier. Instead of snow-white, the team found it of a dirty brown colour and covered with crevasses. On seeing the melting rate, TERI and the university have now sounded an alarm bell. The glacier attracts many trekkers also and they are shocked when they reach there. “Instead of being a point of joy and beauty, it offers a depressing sight,” said a Delhi-based environment loving photographer, Kamal Sahai, who was recently there. “It looked more like a huge mudslide than a frozen reservoir of fresh water,” Sahai said. One can take a short trek to the Kolahoi glacier from Pahalgam and return in four to five days. According to Ghulam Jeelani, a geo-hydrologist, who visited the glacier as a member of the University of Kashmir’s research expedition, “if the glacier continues to melt at the current speed, it may disappear from the map of glaciers in a decade or so.” During a recent visit to the Kashmir Valley, this correspondent met many environmentalists who expressed concern over the “green future of Kashmir” because of melting Kolahoi glacier. They have appealed to the people to sign a petition urging UN Secretary-General, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari to create and sign a Kolahoi Accord by 2011. The Kolahoi glacier’s melting has put on stake the Kashmir valley’s reputation as one of the world’s most beautiful tourist destination. It also threatens the livelihood of lakhs of people. Kolahoi’s melting is creating a scary future scenario for the valley. This glacier feeds the Jhelum, which drains into Srinagar’s Dal Lake - the most popular attraction for domestic and foreign tourists. The lake’s shikharas (houseboats) are world famous. A long tussle between Pakistan and India over Kashmir, which turned ugly with terrorism spreading its wings, stopped attention focusing on the alarming shrinkage of the Kolahoi glacier. TERI scientist Syed Hasnain, who is India’s top glacier expert, has accused the government of being less interested in environmental problems. “Both New Delhi and Islamabad should put politics aside, and deal with the glacier’s melting issue, otherwise an environmental disaster is not far.” TERI plans to include Kolahoi in an index of benchmark glaciers that span the Himalayas. It is the Kolahoi and other such glaciers’ water that has made the Kashmir valley so fertile. The valley produces a rich crop of rice, wheat and corn. And, of course, famous apple orchards and fields of saffron are also there - thanks to the glacier waters. The valley’s natural beauty depends on water, and the water supply depends on glaciers such as Kolahoi. After the snow melts in May and June, the glaciers are the only source of water. “If these glaciers disappear, we will lose our heaven,” says an old taxi driver, Mohd. Ali, living in Srinagar. An environmentalist in Srinagar commented, “Kashmir needs a ‘political climate change’ to save the Kolahoi glacier which will ensure Kashmir retains its status as heaven on earth.” Maybe, the slow death of Kashmir’s lush valley will wake up the ‘azadi’ seekers’ to put down their arms and find a common cause to save their paradise, environmentalists are hoping. |
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