Why Better Roads Haven’t Ended Kashmir’s Travel Problems
By Uzma Qadir Mir
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 black-topped. 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........





















Toi Staff
Sabine Sterk
Gideon Levy
Penny S. Tee
Waka Ikeda
Mark Travers Ph.d
John Nosta
Daniel Orenstein