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Water woes in Kashmir due to low river levels

NewsWater woes in Kashmir due to low river levels

After three decades, drinking water scarcity looms large in Kashmir where dried riverbeds are not allowing water to reach the main reservoirs of about a hundred water supply schemes in the entire valley. There is no drinking water available in hundreds of villages, most of which are in Budgam, Baramulla and Kupwara, officials of PHE (Public Health Engineering) and irrigation department said.

With no rainfall in the October so far, the irrigation and flood control department has never seen water levels in the rivers so low. According to the officials of the PHE department, they have started tanker water supply to many villages in North Kashmir. The senior engineers of PHE said that 55-60% capacity of more than a dozen water supply schemes in North Kashmir have been affected due to low levels of water in the river Jhelum. The government is trying to supply water through tankers in a majority of the villages in Central and North Kashmir, but according to engineers, it is a costly exercise. 

In Baramulla division of PHE, 80% of 18 water supply schemes have been impacted due to lowest ever water levels of Jhelum. “We are trying our best to face this crisis. We know that it is impossible to cater to lakhs of people in Baramulla division by supplying water through tankers,” Zafar Ahmad Faktoo, executive engineer of Baramulla division, PHE, told this reporter. 

The PHE department along with the flood control department has pressed into service machines at various places in Jhelum’s riverbed. They have been able to divert the water to that point by making diversion channels, said a senior engineer. 

Kashmir’s “weather man”, Sonam Lotus, while talking to this reporter, said that this phenomenon will persist as the monsoon circulation remained very little this year in J&K. He said rainfall is not expected immediately. Protests are being witnessed in Baramulla and in the Khan Sahib area of Budgam district as people have dry taps with no water supply available. MLA of Khan Sahib, Hakim Mohammed Yasin, said that on a daily basis deputations are coming from many villages as there is no drinking water. He said that the government should immediately respond as the crisis is growing in his Assembly segment. He claimed that no tanker service has been started in the affected villages to supply water to them.

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