Chief Minister Omar Abdullah’s assertion that “tourism without sustainability is an unqualified disaster” is a timely and necessary wake-up call for Jammu and Kashmir. For decades, the region has leaned heavily on volume-driven tourism, prioritising numbers over quality, often at the expense of its fragile ecology and long-term economic resilience. The shift from a volume-based to a value-based tourism model is both visionary and pragmatic, and deserves full-throated support from all stakeholders. For nearly 30-35 years, Kashmir was known more for turmoil than its beauty, compelling a focus on high footfall to project normalcy, which is historically accurate. However, the vulnerability of this approach was laid bare last year when “one incident and everything vanished”. The sudden drop from traffic jams to deserted streets was a stark reminder that volume tourism, while politically and economically expedient in the short term, offers little insulation against shocks. Equally important is CM’s call for treating Gulmarg, Pahalgam, Sonamarg, and Dal Lake “the same way we treat our own homes”. This mindset shift, where environmental conservation becomes a personal responsibility, is as critical as government intervention. Carrying-capacity-based tourism planning is particularly significant. Not all destinations have the same ecological sensitivity; a uniform approach to visitor management is neither scientific nor sustainable. Kashmir’s greatest tourism asset is its natural beauty. This asset must be preserved, not exploited. The government’s responsibility is to create infrastructure and conditions that allow people to earn better from tourism while protecting the environment. This is where value tourism comes in. By charging one tourist a hundred rupees rather than a hundred tourists one rupee each, Kashmir can generate higher revenue with lower environmental stress, ensuring long-term prosperity for local communities. The vision is about protecting the environment as well as livelihoods. Sustainable tourism, built on community participation, scientific planning, and environmental conservation, is the only path forward. The CM has drawn a clear line in the sand. Now it is up to policymakers, industry stakeholders, and citizens to walk that path together.
In a world increasingly fractured by religious intolerance and sectarian strife, the teachings of Islam offer a profound and urgent reminder: every human being, regardless of faith, deserves respect. The Quran and...
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