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Home Opinion Ideas

Rotting Meat Poisoning Kashmir’s Rivers

Ruhail Maqbool Sheikh by Ruhail Maqbool Sheikh
September 23, 2025
in Ideas
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Glaciers Met, Heat wave Induced Water Scarcity In Kashmir
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“Every drop counts—protecting water is protecting life itself.”

Ruhail Maqbool Sheikh

Paradise Under Threat: Kashmir, often celebrated as Paradise on Earth, is witnessing a disturbing reality. Its pristine rivers, streams, and lakesonce lifelines of culture, heritage, and livelihoodare under attack. The shocking dumping of rotten meat into these water bodies has sparked not only disgust but also deep alarm. This is not a routine pollution incident; it is an ecological and public health emergency, reminding us that negligence toward nature always strikes back. Water is the soul of Kashmir. From Dal Lake to Doodhganga, from the Jhelum to the countless springs that quench the valley’s thirst, every drop carries life. But what happens when these waters are poisoned deliberately or through carelessness? The answer lies before us-polluted streams, dying fish, foul smells, and the slow destruction of a delicate ecosystem.
Rotten Meat: More Than Just WasteRotten meat, once dumped into water, undergoes rapid decomposition. This process releases:Toxins and harmful bacteria such as E. coli and Salmonella, posing direct risks of waterborne diseases.Ammonia and nitrogen compounds, which drastically reduce oxygen levels in water, suffocating aquatic life. Foul odour and taste, making water unfit for human consumption even after treatment.The damage doesn’t stop at the water’s surface. The pollutants seep deep into the soil, contaminating groundwater reserves that rural communities depend on. This means the crisis doesn’t stay confined to a single stream or lake, it spreads invisibly across Kashmir’s interconnected water systems.
Public Health Emergency: Unsafe drinking water is already a challenge in many parts of Kashmir. The careless disposal of rotten meat worsens this crisis. Polluted water sources can trigger outbreaks of diarrheal diseases, cholera, dysentery, and even long-term conditions like liver and kidney damage. Children and the elderly are especially vulnerable. Hospitals in rural areas often lack the resources to cope with such emergencies. A rise in waterborne illnesses could easily overwhelm the fragile healthcare infrastructure. The tragedy is that all of this is preventable, if only waste were managed responsibly.
Ecological Impact: Silent Suffering of Aquatic Life Kashmir’s rivers and lakes are home to a variety of fish, plants, and microorganisms. Dumping rotten meat disrupts this balance: Fish populations decline as oxygen levels fall and toxins rise. Algal blooms flourish in nutrient-rich polluted waters, further choking aquatic life. Migratory birds, which feed on fish and aquatic plants, face food scarcity. The chain reaction is devastating. From a few pieces of discarded meat, an entire ecological web begins to collapse. Kashmir’s biodiversity, already under pressure from urbanization and climate change, cannot afford such reckless damage.

“Treating Kashmir’s waterways as dumping grounds has dire consequences for human health and the environment. What we pollute today will inevitably harm us in the future. We must stop polluting our rivers and lakes to protect our well-being and the future of our children.”

A Cultural, Ethical Question: In Kashmir, water is more than a resource-it is sacred. Springs and streams have always been woven into the spiritual and cultural fabric of the valley. The dumping of rotten meat into these holy waters is not just an environmental crime; it is a cultural insult. It reflects a dangerous disconnect between people and nature, where short-term convenience outweighs long-term survival.This is also an ethical question. How can we knowingly poison the very water that gives us life? What message do we leave for future generations when we treat rivers as garbage pits instead of lifelines?
Responsibilities, Accountability| The Crisis Calls For Immediate Action At Multiple Levels: Government Accountability- Authorities must ensure strict monitoring of waste disposal practices. Fines, penalties, and legal actions against offenders should be enforced without compromise. Community Awareness – People must be educated that dumping waste, especially organic matter like meat, directly affects their own drinking water. Grassroots awareness campaigns can make a huge difference. Infrastructure Development – Investments in modern slaughterhouse facilities, composting units, and waste-to-energy plants can turn organic waste into resources instead of pollutants. Civil Society Engagement – GOs, activists, and environmental groups must amplify the issue, keeping public attention focused on solutions rather than letting the problem fade with time.
The Way Forward: Restoring the LifelinesCleaning polluted rivers and lakes is difficult but not impossible. Community-driven clean-up drives, stricter monitoring of waste management, and scientific interventions such as aeration of lakes or bio-remediation can help restore water quality.
Most importantly, the dumping of rotten meat must be treated as a serious environmental offense. Awareness must go hand-in-hand with enforcement. Schools, mosques, and community gatherings should carry messages that reinforce water as a sacred, shared responsibility.
A Personal Reflection: As someone who has worked in the field of water testing, awareness generation, waste management and conservation, I have seen first-hand how fragile Kashmir’s waters are. A single careless act, whether it is throwing plastic, draining sewage, or dumping rotten meat, sets off ripples of destruction. But I have also seen how small acts of responsibility-cleaning a spring, planting trees near catchment areas, spreading awareness among childrencreate ripples of hope.The battle for Kashmir’s waters is not just scientific, it is emotional, cultural, and moral. Protecting water means protecting our heritage, our health, and our very existence.
A Wake-Up Call We Cannot Ignore: The sight of rotten meat floating in Kashmir’s waters is shocking, but it should also be awakening. Nature is reminding us: what we pollute today will return to us tomorrow. If we continue to treat rivers and lakes as dumping grounds, we are signing away our health, our livelihoods, and the future of our children.
“This is the time to act. To conserve. To respect. To restore.
Because water is lifeand poisoning it is poisoning ourselves”.
(The author is a researcher and a freelancer. The views, opinions and conclusions expressed in this article are those of the author and aren’t necessarily in accord with the views of “Kashmir Horizon”)
[email protected]

Ruhail Maqbool Sheikh

Ruhail Maqbool Sheikh

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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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