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Home Opinion Editorial

Kashmir Floods: Tractor Water Delivery

From Editor's Desk by From Editor's Desk
September 10, 2025
in Editorial
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Int’l Yoga Day 2025: A Call for Collective Well-being
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“Alarmingly, some areas received limited water supply in an unprofessional manner, delivered via tractor-mounted tanks typically used for pesticide spraying, raising serious public health concerns.”

While floods often bring a visible threat of structural damage, Srinagar’s recent water crisis reveals a more insidious danger: the failure of essential services. Despite not causing the catastrophic infrastructure damage of the 2014 floods, the recent high water levels have plunged the city into a severe drinking water shortage, exposing critical lapses in the government’s emergency response. The public outcry, amplified by media reports, has been met with a deafening silence from authorities, leaving residents feeling abandoned and aghast. The initial promise of a swift response, with control rooms and helplines established to dispatch water tankers, has proven to be an empty gesture. Residents report making repeated, fruitless calls to the Jal Shakti Department, with many going for days without a single delivery. This breakdown in a simple, life-sustaining service points to a profound disconnect between the government’s stated intentions and its on-the-ground capabilities. It’s not just a logistical failure but a failure of accountability. Adding insult to injury, the limited water that was supplied to some areas was delivered in an alarmingly unprofessional manner. The use of tractor-mounted tanks—typically reserved for spraying pesticides in apple orchards—raises serious public health and safety concerns. This ad-hoc and potentially dangerous practice casts doubt on the integrity of the water supply. It is unconscionable to risk contaminating drinking water with agricultural chemicals. The lack of clear protocols and quality control suggests either a severe lack of resources or a shocking disregard for public well-being. This crisis goes beyond a simple post-flood disruption. It unmasks a systemic unpreparedness that has left citizens to fend for themselves. The people expect and deserve a robust and reliable emergency response, especially from departments like Jal Shakti, which are assigned the job of addressing a fundamental human need.

“The experiences of water crisis during the recent flooding in Kashmir necessitates the urgent need to implement a comprehensive water management plan. The current system is inadequate and risks turning future weather crises, exacerbated by climate change, into humanitarian disasters. The challenges faced by the region during these events are magnified, demanding a decisive and immediate response to utilize water resources effectively.”

In the face of increasing climate volatility and recurrent natural disasters, the Jal Shakti Department must immediately procure a fleet of water tankers to ensure the supply of drinking water during emergencies such as floods and droughts. The lack of a credible, immediate solution presents a significant risk, threatening to escalate future weather-induced crises into humanitarian disasters. This isn’t merely a call for enhanced crisis management; it’s a critical demand for a complete overhaul of a system that has repeatedly failed its citizens in their greatest time of need. With climate eventualities on the rise across Jammu & Kashmir and other northern states like Uttarakhand, Punjab, and Himachal Pradesh, the challenges faced by people in Jammu & Kashmir during these periods are magnified. Wisdom demands that  Jammu & Kashmir Government acts decisively to implement a comprehensive water management plan that utilizes our water resources effectively during public emergencies.

 

 

 

From Editor's Desk

From Editor's Desk

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The publication of “Kashmir Horizon” as an English daily was started with a modest attempt on May 19, 2008.It has been a Himalayan attempt for “The Kashmir Horizon” to survive the challenges posed to journalism in the violence fraught place like Jammu & Kashmir.

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