Kashmir’s Rivers Are Running Out of Space
By Hidayat Bukhari
Floods in Kashmir are not accidents of nature. They are the visible outcome of how rivers, lakes, and wetlands have been treated over generations.
The Jhelum was once a lifeline, carrying snowmelt and rain through Srinagar into Wular Lake. Canals spread its waters, irrigating fields and replenishing marshes. The Flood Spill Channel, cut over a century ago, protected the city by diverting excess flow.
Today, this system exists mostly in memory.
Wetlands have been claimed for housing, canals buried under roads, and flood channels blocked by construction. Every heavy rain is now a gamble between survival and disaster.
The Jhelum’s geography makes it both a lifeline and a threat.
Between Sangam and Wular, the river drops barely a centimetre per 100 metres, one of the flattest gradients in South Asia. Water does not drain quickly. It spreads across the floodplain.
Until the 1990s, the Srinagar stretch of the Jhelum could carry roughly 45,000 cusecs, with the Flood Spill Channel adding another 12,000. Wular Lake, Asia’s largest freshwater lake, acted as a giant sponge.........





















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