Srinagar, April 23 -- ByMuhammad Arbaaz Niazii
Kashmir has always treated water as more than a resource. It lives inside poetry and prayer. Lakes breathe with the seasons. Wetlands host birds on journeys older than borders. To grow up in the valley means growing up beside water.
Today that water retreats.
A lake shrinks at the edges, a marsh turns to dry ground, channels clog, shorelines advance where water once stood. The disappearance moves slowly enough to escape outrage until one day the absence becomes obvious to everyone.
This goes beyond nostalgia.
The Comptroller and Auditor General of India laid bare the scale of this crisis in its latest report on lake conservation in Jammu and Kashmir. Out of 697 identified lakes, 518, nea...
Click here to read full article from source
To read the full article or to get the complete feed from this publication, please
Contact Us.