कोशिश गोल्ड - मुक्त
The Hold-Up in the Himalayas
Kashmir Observer
|December 10, 2025 Issue
Kashmir's mobility story is shifting, though the absence of seamless railway access continues to hold back its biggest industries.
The road to Kashmir's high-altitude villages often begins with a single bend in a mountain.
One moment you pass through a busy market filled with arguments over crop prices, and the next you are on a cliffside road with the Jhelum shining far below.
Travel in Jammu & Kashmir has always depended on roads like these. People grow up reading weather reports for survival. A sudden snowfall can turn a 20-minute trip into an overnight wait. A landslide can cut off an entire tehsil from the rest of the world.
These disruptions were once accepted as part of the landscape, woven into conversations and expectations.
Families planned weddings around weather forecasts. Students kept buffers of days while preparing to leave for exams in Jammu. Farmers held their breath while trucks full of apples trundled through the mountains, hoping the road ahead stayed open long enough to reach a mandi.
Life moved forward, though often on a timetable that the mountains controlled.
A shift began when the region witnessed an unprecedented push in building and modernizing roads. Villagers speak about the macadamization drives the way one might recount the arrival of electricity decades ago.
Over 41,000 kilometers of roads now run across the Union Territory, three-quarters of them blacktopped. Administrators point to the remarkable pace of construction, an average of more than 20 kilometers a day.
What once took seasons of negotiation and approvals now moves with a momentum that feels new to the region.
In hamlets tucked deep into hillsides, this progress has reshaped daily life. Students from remote areas reach schools without worrying if the bridge ahead survived last night's storm. Pregnant women are no longer carried for miles on makeshift stretchers to reach district hospitals. Banking vans, ration trucks, and ambulances appear in places where they were once rare visitors.
यह कहानी Kashmir Observer के December 10, 2025 Issue संस्करण से ली गई है।
हजारों चुनिंदा प्रीमियम कहानियों और 10,000 से अधिक पत्रिकाओं और समाचार पत्रों तक पहुंचने के लिए मैगज़्टर गोल्ड की सदस्यता लें।
क्या आप पहले से ही ग्राहक हैं? साइन इन करें
Kashmir Observer से और कहानियाँ
Kashmir Observer
Into the Flames
As fires engulf the hills, frontline workers confront deadly conditions without basic safety measures, revealing a crisis in forest protection.
2 mins
December 10, 2025 Issue
Kashmir Observer
Mushaira, Journal Release Mark Baramulla Literary I Event
SRINAGAR: A grand literary gathering was organised under the patronage of Adbee Markaz Kamraz (AMK) and in collaboration with the Jammu & Kashmir Academy of Art, Culture and Languages, as Daera-e-Adab Delina Baramulla hosted a vibrant event at the AMK office in Kanispora, Baramulla.
1 mins
December 10, 2025 Issue
Kashmir Observer
Kashmir Moves To Tackle Rising Stray Dog Concerns Under SC Orders
With stray dog attacks continuing to trigger public concern across the Valley, the administration in Kashmir has begun tightening its response in line with Supreme Court directives.
1 mins
December 10, 2025 Issue
Kashmir Observer
Hundreds Join Army-sponsored Marathon in Poonch
Hundreds of enthusiastic youth on Tuesday took part in an Army-sponsored marathon near the Line of Control (LoC) in Jammu and Kashmir's Poonch district, officials said.
1 min
December 10, 2025 Issue
Kashmir Observer
Lessons at the Counter
A portrait of financial wisdom built through small choices, shared burdens and steady hope.
1 mins
December 10, 2025 Issue
Kashmir Observer
The Hold-Up in the Himalayas
Kashmir's mobility story is shifting, though the absence of seamless railway access continues to hold back its biggest industries.
4 mins
December 10, 2025 Issue
Kashmir Observer
Kashmir Receives Over 3.5 Cr Poultry Birds This Year
Authorities on Tuesday said that nearly 3.5 crore poultry birds have reached Kashmir through road transportation this year, with an average of 50-60 vehicles carrying poultry and bovine livestock entering the Valley every day.
1 mins
December 10, 2025 Issue
Kashmir Observer
Kashmir's New Hunger
Young people in Kashmir are eating very differently from the generation before them.
2 mins
December 10, 2025 Issue
Kashmir Observer
Govt Orders 10% Cut In IndiGo Flights
422 Flights Cancelled on Tuesday Across Metro Airports
1 min
December 10, 2025 Issue
Kashmir Observer
Civil Society Hails Action on Illegal Brick Kilns
BUDGAM: A group of civil society delegation met Deputy Commissioner Budgam Dr. Bilal Mohiuddin Bhat on Tuesday to discuss the administration's ongoing action against illegal brick kilns in the district.
1 min
December 10, 2025 Issue
Listen
Translate
Change font size
