Category: Union Territory

  • Kashmir braces for third spell of snow

    Srinagar: The Kashmir region is bracing for another spell of snowfall even as cold wave conditions persist across the Valley with night temperatures in Srinagar plummeting to below sub-zero levels.

    As per the latest forecast, the Kashmir region is expected to witness snowfall on December 20.

    Earlier, the region witnesses the second spell of snowfall on December 13 whereas the first spell was recorded in the first week of November this year.

    “A fairly widespread activity is expected on Friday. But the weather is expected to improve from Saturday,” a Met official in Srinagar said. He said the cold wave conditions continue across the region with Srinagar today recording a minimum of -2.3 °C temperature during the night whereas the maximum day temperature was recorded at 5.8 °C.

  • 190 stone pelting incidents in Valley since Aug 5

    As many as 190 stone pelting incidents have been reported in Kashmir Valley ever since the abrogation of Jammu and Kashmir’s special status under Article 370, and 250 people involved in them are currently in jails, officials said on Wednesday.
    There have been a total 171 attempts of infiltration from across the border to Jammu and Kashmir this year till October and 114 of them were successful, they said.
    Of the total “successful” infiltration bids, 59 were since August — seven in October, 20 in September and 32 in August, a senior home ministry official said.
    There had been 143 successful infiltrations in 2018, 136 in 2017 and 119 in 2016.
    There were a total of 544 incidents of stone pelting so far in 2019 and 190 of them have taken place since August 5 when Article 370 provisions were abrogated.
    Till December 8, altogether 356 people from Jammu and Kashmir were in jail and 250 of them were stone pelters, the official said.
    There were 802 incidents of stone pelting in the Valley in 2018. PTI

  • At -27.7 °C, Drass sees year’s coldest night

    Jammu: Drass, India’s coldest inhabited place in Kargil district of Ladakh Union Territory (UT), has recorded this winter’s lowest temperature so far.

    The minimum temperature plummeted to -27.7°C while maximum temperature was recorded at -13°C. Drass, the second coldest place after Siberia (Russia) on earth is witnessing daily drop in temperature as December is progressing.

    Leh shivers at -18°C

    The minimum temperature plummeted to -27.7°C while maximum temperature was recorded at -13°C. Drass, the second coldest place after Siberia (Russia) on earth is witnessing daily drop in temperature as December is progressing.
    As per the Indian Meteorological Department (IMD), Ladakh UT is facing cold wave conditions and temperature is likely to dip further. In Leh, the minimum temperature was recorded at -18°C while the maximum temperature was recorded at 0°C.
    As per the Indian Meteorological Department (IMD), Ladakh is facing cold wave conditions and temperature is likely to dip further. In Leh, minimum temperature was recorded at -18°C while maximum temperature was recorded at 0°C.

    The inhospitable place of India is very strategic town along the Line of Control (LoC) with Pakistan and its nearly 15,000 residents have been living in the area for centuries. Adapted to the harsh climate but the residents are mostly deprived of modern amenities, especially during winter months. Successive government’s in erstwhile J&K had also failed to resolve even basic issues of the people. Power supply is also erratic during the winters.

    When contacted, Director IMD, Srinagar, Dr Sonum Lotus said, “It is likely to plummet further till mid January next year but -27.7 degrees was lowest so far recorded by our station. Overall cold conditions will intensify further”.

    Lowest recorded temperature in the area was witnessed at -60°C on January 9, 1995.

    “A majority of the people face lot of hardships as there is very poor health infrastructure. -30 to -35°C is common during the winters. The area needs focused development”, said Shazeya from Drass who is studying in Jammu.

    For about seven months many hamlets in sparsely inhabited region remain cut off from rest of the world with the administration making stocking of fuel, food grains during the brief summer months.

  • Situation along LoC can escalate any time: Army chief Bipin Rawat

    NEW DELHI: India has to be prepared for escalation in the situation along the Line of Control with Pakistan, said Army chief General Bipin Rawat on Wednesday, even as the Pakistan army continues to attempt BAT (border action team) operations as well as indulge in heavy cross-border firing after J&K’s special status was abrogated in August.

    “The situation along the LoC can escalate any time. We have to be prepared for the spiraling of the escalatory matrix,” said General Rawat. The Army is maintaining a high level of operational readiness, with detailed plans chalked out to cater for different contingencies.

    The statement comes barely a couple of days after the Army thwarted yet another BAT operation by the Pakistan Army in the Sunderbani sector along the LoC but lost a soldier while another one was injured in the heavy exchange of firing on Monday. “Pakistan is attempting BAT actions almost every third day. We keep on foiling them and taking retaliatory action,” said a source.
    This has been a particularly violent year along the 778-km LoC, with as many as 2,900 ceasefire violations (CFVs) also being recorded till now to break all annual records since 2003. The number of CFVs was 971 in 2017 and 1,629 in 2018.

    The intensity of the cross-border firings, with both sides often deploying heavy mortars, anti-tank guided missiles and artillery guns, first registered a major spike after IAF fighters conducted the pre-dawn air strikes on the major Jaish-e-Mohammed facility at Balakot in the Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province of Pakistan on February 26.

    Pakistan had retaliated on February 27 by sending a “strike package” of 24 fighters, including F-16s, JF-17s and Mirage-5 attack jets, to target Indian military installations in the Nowshera sector across the LoC, which included a brigade headquarters and an ammunition dump.

    Though the IAF had foiled the attempt, it lost the MiG-21 being flown by Wing Commander Abhinandan Varthaman. “If the Pakistani fighters had managed to hit an important target like an ammunition dump, we would have definitely taken strong retaliatory action. We were prepared for escalation,” said the source.

  • Life-threatening bacteria found in Make-up products: Study

    The research looked at beauty blender products – hugely popular make-up sponges used to blend foundation and contouring on the face.

    The vast majority of in-use make-up products such as beauty blenders, mascara and lip gloss are contaminated with potentially life threatening superbugs, researchers have warned.

    “Make-up products used every day by millions of people in the UK are contaminated with potentially deadly bugs, such as E.coli and Staphylococci, because most are not being cleaned and are used far beyond their expiry dates,” said study lead author Amreen Bashir from Aston University in the US.

    According to the study published in the Journal of Applied Microbiology, bacteria that can cause illnesses ranging from skin infections to blood poisoning if used near eyes, mouth or cuts or grazes were found in nine out of ten of the products.

    This risk is amplified in immunocompromised people who are more likely to contract infections from opportunistic bacteria.

    The relatively new beauty blenders – sponges used to apply skin foundation products – were found to have the highest levels of potentially harmful bacteria – with the vast majority (93 per cent) not having ever been cleaned, despite more than two thirds (64 per cent) being dropped on the floor at some point during use.

    The research looked at beauty blender products – hugely popular make-up sponges used to blend foundation and contouring on the face.

    Often endorsed by celebrities, these sponges are estimated to have sold over 6.5 million worldwide.

    The researchers found these products are particularly susceptible to contamination as they are often left damp after use, which creates an ideal breeding ground for harmful bacteria.

    “Consumers’ poor hygiene practices when it comes to using make-up, especially beauty blenders, is very worrying when you consider that we found bacteria such as E.coli – which is linked with faecal contamination – breeding on the products we tested,” Bashir said.

    The findings reveal that consumers are unwittingly putting themselves at risk, and that manufacturers and regulatory bodies should do more to protect their customers by making expiry dates and cleaning requirements more prominent on packaging.

    EU guidance holds make-up brands to strict hygiene standards of manufacture and states that E.coli in particular should not be found in any concentration in new cosmetic products.

    However, there is currently limited consumer protection around the risks of contaminating products while in use.

    According to the study, post-Brexit, UK consumers could be at even greater risk as they will no longer be protected by EU regulations and could find themselves purchasing more beauty products from the US – for example – where there are no regulatory requirements to put expiry dates on make-up packaging at all.

  • BJP in no hurry to move a no-confidence-motion against SMC Mayor

    Srinagar, Dec 17: Senior leader of BJP and incharge Kashmir Sunil Sharma on Tuesday said the party was in no hurry to move a no-confidence-motion against Srinagar Municipal Corporation (SMC) Mayor and his deputy “but 30-40 corporators were approaching us.”
    “We are not interested in moving no-confidence-motion against Srinagar Municipal Corporation (SMC) Mayor and his deputy. But the fact is that 30-40 corporators have approached us saying the Mayor has not been able to deliver on ground,” Sharma told KNS
    “The reality is that the incumbent Mayor has failed to deliver on ground. But despite that we are in no mood to dislodge him,” he added. (KNS)

  • Kashmir Economy Suffered Loss Of Rs 17,878 Cr In 4 Months

    SRINAGAR – The Kashmir econo­my suffered loss to the tune of Rs 17,878 crore in four months of re­strictions and shutdown in the val­ley following abrogation of Article 370 and creation of two union ter­ritories out of Jammu and Kashmir, a trade body said on Tuesday.

    Releasing a comprehensive sector-wise report on losses due to disturbance after the August 5 announcement by Home Minister Amit Shah, the Kashmir Chamber of Commerce and Industry (KCCI) said the losses have been assessed based on Jammu and Kashmir’s gross domestic product of 2017-18.

    “The study has focused on the 10 districts of Kashmir Valley compris­ing 55 per cent of the total popu­lation of Jammu and Kashmir. A time span of 120 days has been as­sumed for the calculations. As per this method, Kashmir’s economy has suffered a loss of Rs 17,878.18 crores,” the report said.

    An assessment based on actual number of unit holders and per­sons engaged in each sector, job and financial losses suffered by them was undertaken, it said.

    “For example, the tourism sector has been broken into its various sub-sectors like tour operators (inbound and outbound), house boats, hotels, tourist transport, shikaras, ad­venture sports and other allied sectors.

  • Fresh WD Approaching J&K

    SRINAGAR – A fresh western dis­turbance is likely to hit Jammu and Kashmir on Thursday, even as nights have become more chilly following drop in the minimum temperature due to open sky in the Valley. People continued to shiver despite some improvement in the minimum temperature in Union Territory (UT) of Ladakh, where ma­jority river bodies remained frozen.

    A Met department spokesman said here on Tuesday that weather will remain during the next 24 hours in the UT of J&K and Ladakh. How­ever, he said a fresh WD is likely to hit the region on December 19 which could result in isolated light rain or snow in the region.

    Srinagar, summer capital of UT of Jammu and Kashmir, was two degree colder than yes­terday while famed health resort of Pahalgam was coldest at minus 12.2 degree.

    He said again yesterday’s minimum tem­perature of minus 1.6 degree, it witnessed major drop and settled at minus 3.7 degree, 2.2 notches below normal in Srinagar. Despite sunny day yesterday, the maximum tempera­ture in the city was 7.9 degree, two degree be­low normal in Srinagar, he said.

    After witnessing yet another chilly night, sun was again out today in the city though the intensity of the heat was low due to icy cold winds.

  • Will restore broadband Internet in phases: J&K DGP

    Director General of Police (DGP) Dilbag Singh on Saturday said that the J&K administration is mulling to restore the broadband internet service in Kashmir region in a phased manner.

    “Broadband internet service is very much functional in Jammu province and now that situation has improved in the Valley as well. We’re planning to restore this service in Kashmir region in a phased manner,” the DGP told reporters after inaugurating a women and child-friendly police station here.

    DGP Singh, however, refused to share details about when the detained Kashmiri leaders would be released. “As of now, I don’t think it is relevant to answer this question. But as and when it happens we’ll share inputs with media,” the DGP said.

    He said, “In the past 4-5 months, J&K Police and other security forces did a commendable job. Security personnel played a pivotal role in restoring normalcy in Kashmir region.”

    The DGP said, “General public in Kashmir also cooperated despite seeing killings, violence at the hands of militants and facing life threats. Our police force tried its level best to allay the fear in the minds of people. We acted sternly against the militants and various other modules working in Kashmir to instill a sense of panic among the people.”

    “During the process, we busted various such modules, arrested the militants and killed 19 of them,” DGP, Dilbag Singh said, adding, “And our fight against militancy will go on as our priority is to make J&K UT militancy free.” On preparations along the International Border and Line of Control the DGP said, “A tight security grid has been put in place to check the attempts being made to send militants to this side. And this security grid will be strengthened further.”

  • PSA on Farooq Abdullah extended by three months

    The PSA was slapped on Abdullah, who continues to be in detention at his Gupkar residence here in Srinagar, which has been declared as sub-jail, on September 17.

    Public Safety Act (PSA) on former Jammu and Kashmir chief minister Farooq Abdullah has been extended by three months till March 14, 2020.

    The PSA was slapped on Abdullah, who continues to be in detention at his Gupkar residence here in Srinagar, which has been declared as sub-jail, on September 17.

    Three former chief ministers, who were detained after the revocation of Article 370 on August 5, continue to be in detention.

    While Mehbooba Mufti was moved from a government house in Chashme Shahi to a new location at the MA Road in Srinagar, Omar Abdullah is in detention at Hari Niwas.

    Besides, thirty five mainstream politicians who were earlier detained in the Centaur hotel on the banks of the Dal lake, were recently moved to the MLA’s hostel.