City
Epaper

Crisis in PoJK: Deforestation devastates environment and livelihoods

By ANI | Updated: November 18, 2024 14:40 IST

Chinari [PoJK], November 18 : In Pakistan-occupied Jammu and Kashmir (PoJK), an alarming environmental crisis is rapidly unfolding. Once ...

Open in App

Chinari [PoJK], November 18 : In Pakistan-occupied Jammu and Kashmir (PoJK), an alarming environmental crisis is rapidly unfolding. Once home to vast, lush forests, this region has seen its green cover decimated over the past several decades.

The rapid deforestation, particularly in areas like Chinari, has only exacerbated the crisis. As the forests vanish, so does the natural filtration system that once regulated air quality and helped prevent erosion, leaving the land more vulnerable to environmental degradation.

Arshad Rasheed, a local resident, shared a stark reminder of the dramatic change.

"In this region, 75 per cent of the land was once covered by forests, but today that figure has dropped to around 10 per cent. Before 1947, the region's economy was heavily dependent on forest resources. After the region became part of PoJK, large-scale deforestation began, and the forest cover has been reduced from 75 per cent to just 10 per cent today", he said.

The consequences of this widespread deforestation are most severely felt by the local communities who once depended on the forests for their livelihoods.

In Chinari, vast amounts of wood, remnants of the once-thriving forests, now lie rotting on the ground, untouched for decades.

While the government has imposed a ban on cutting trees in an effort to preserve the remaining forest cover, this policy has inadvertently worsened the plight of local residents, many of whom are already struggling with poverty.

Arshad explained the dilemma thus faced, noting, "People living near the forests need fuel for cooking and heating, but the government has made no provision to address this need. While the ban on cutting trees was intended to protect the remaining forests, it ignores the fact that people depend on these resources for their daily survival. Today, locals are prohibited from cutting their own trees, yet their fuel needs are not being met by the government".

For the people of Chinari and other parts of PoJK, the issue is no longer just about conserving the environment. It has become a fight for survival in a landscape that has been stripped of the resources they once relied on.

With the forests gone and no viable alternatives in place, their future looks increasingly uncertain, as they face both environmental collapse and a lack of basic resources.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

MumbaiMumbai Airport: Nepali Man Bangladeshi resident Arrested With Fake Indian Passports

NationalJyotiraditya Scindia urges male family members of women in local, panchayat bodies not to interfere in official works

NationalChennai gears up for monsoon with intensified preventive measures

Entertainment"Baut Pyara Hai": Diljit Dosanjh heaps praise on Aryan Khan, says meeting him felt like SRK

AurangabadBusinessman’s wife threatened with death over financial dispute

International Realted Stories

InternationalTurkish insults and threats against Israeli Minister Miri Regev

InternationalKarachi man accused of assaulting minor girls since 2016 remanded in police custody for 5 days

International"Tibet is the palm; the 5 fingers are Ladakh, Nepal, Bhutan, Sikkim, & AP ": Tibet's former PM on China's expansionism

International"China wants to control everything. You have no idea what the Chinese system is," warns Lobsang Sangay on India-China thaw

InternationalNepal to hold polls on March 5, says President Ramchandra Paudel