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The Himalayan Strain

Kashmir Observer

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November 20,2025 Issue

Climate pressure, rare earth discoveries, and local defiance now define Ladakh’s uncertain path.

- Mehak Fayaz and Naveed Ahmad

The Himalayan Strain

Ladakh today stands at the meeting point of India’s most complex challenges.

The region faces melting glaciers, declining livelihoods, and rising political pressure at a time when China and Pakistan are tightening their strategic grip nearby.

Ladakh’s internal tensions now carry national consequences. Any misstep risks unsettling India’s security calculus in the northern frontier.

Much of this tension took shape after August 2019, when Ladakh was separated from Jammu and Kashmir and placed under direct central administration.

The decision promised faster development and better governance. It also raised concerns about land ownership, demographic change, and the future of Ladakh’s cultural and ecological identity. These concerns grew into public agitation.

The campaign led by Sonam Wangchuk transformed scattered anxieties into a unified movement for statehood and protection under the Sixth Schedule.

The unrest reached its peak with violent clashes that left four people dead and pushed Leh under curfew for the first time in years.

The story often begins with politics. Ladakh’s story begins with its mountains.

The region forms a vital part of the Hindu Kush-Himalayan ecosystem, sometimes called the planet’s “Third Pole” for the volume of ice stored in its glaciers.

These glaciers feed rivers such as the Indus, Sutlej, and Shyok, which support millions across South Asia.

Glaciers in this system melted 65 percent faster between 2011 and 2020 than in the decade before. If warming continues at the current rate, up to 80 percent of the ice could disappear by the end of the century.

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