How Illegal Mining Ignited a Fight to Save a Kashmiri River
Peerzada Rayees has spent years tending to his trout farm in Beerwah, relying entirely on the waters of the Sukhnag River.
On the night of May 23-24, 2024, his farm suffered a devastating blow. Illegal mining operations diverted the river, killing 2,000 trout weighing between 250 and 350 grams each.
The loss of nearly 600 kilograms of fish amounted to roughly three lakh rupees.
It was the loss of a life’s work, the betrayal of a river the man depended on, and the stark reality of unchecked exploitation.
Rayees’s story is a window into the broader destruction along Sukhnag.
Over the past three to four years, illegal mining has stripped the riverbed of boulders, diverted water, and damaged ecosystems. Crops suffered, fisheries collapsed, and communities across Sail, Qumiroo, Kangripora, Kunigund, and nearby areas faced economic and environmental insecurity.
Between 2022 and 2024, 163 short-term permits for boulder extraction were issued, often serving as cover for large-scale plundering. Compensation meant to repair the damage rarely reached the government treasury, leaving villagers to shoulder the consequences.
The case returned to the National Green Tribunal on September 24,........





















Toi Staff
Gideon Levy
Tarik Cyril Amar
Belen Fernandez
Andrew Silow-Carroll
Stefano Lusa
Mark Travers Ph.d
Robert Sarner
Constantin Von Hoffmeister