Srinagar, Indian-administered Kashmir – A distraught Javid Ahmad Bhat fears he could lose the whole 12 months’s earnings from the apples he grows.
Two vans bearing his apples price greater than $10,000 are amongst rows of stranded carriers that stretch for miles alongside a key freeway connecting his metropolis, Baramullah, in Indian-administered Kashmir to the rest of India. Their tarpaulin covers bulge with crates of fruits which have begun to blacken and collapse below the load of rot.
“All our laborious work for the whole 12 months has gone to waste. What we painstakingly nurtured for the reason that spring is misplaced. Nobody will purchase these rotten apples, and they’re going to by no means attain New Delhi. We’re left with no alternative however to throw away each truckloads alongside the freeway,” Bhat informed Al Jazeera on Tuesday.
The Jammu–Srinagar nationwide freeway – the one all-weather highway connection within the Himalayan area – has been repeatedly blocked since August 24 after rain-triggered landslides broken a piece of it. For greater than a month, the area has been battered by a extreme monsoon fury, killing no less than 170 individuals and inflicting intensive harm to properties, roads, and different infrastructure.
Blockade throughout peak harvest season
Horticulture kinds the spine of Indian-administered Kashmir’s financial system, with the valley producing about 20–25 million metric tonnes of apples yearly – roughly 78 p.c of India’s whole apple output, in keeping with information Al Jazeera collected from fruit growers’ associations.
The freeway blockade coincides with the height harvest season in Kashmir, regionally known as “harud”, throughout which apples, walnuts and rice are gathered from hundreds of orchards and fields throughout the valley.
“It’s not simply me or my village – this disaster [road closure] is hitting all of Kashmir’s apple growers. Our total livelihood is determined by this harvest,” stated Bhat, calling it a second blow to the area’s financial system this 12 months after the Pahalgam assault in April, when suspected rebels killed 28 individuals, severely disrupting tourism – one other key sector within the valley.
A neighborhood authorities official, talking on situation of anonymity as a result of he was not authorised to talk to the media, stated about 4,000 vans have been stranded on the freeway at Qazigund space in southern Kashmir’s Anantnag district for 2 weeks, and the fruit loaded on them has begun to rot, leading to estimated losses of almost $146m.
In protest, growers shut down fruit markets throughout Kashmir on Monday and Tuesday as they condemned the federal government’s incapability to clear the important thing highway.
“If the freeway stays blocked for even a couple of extra days, our losses will skyrocket past creativeness,” Ishfaq Ahmad, a fruit grower in Sopore city, informed Al Jazeera.
Sopore in Baramulla district, about 45km (28 miles) from Srinagar, is house to Asia’s largest fruit market. However the sprawling advanced was a scene of despair on Tuesday. Contemporary apple crates remained piled up in an countless wait, as every passing day lowered their worth, or worse, introduced them nearer to rotting. Some estimates stated the value of an apple field had already fallen from 600 rupees ($7) to 400 rupees ($5).
“We’ve got stopped bringing extra apples to the market right here. We’re pressured to go away them on the orchards as a result of there isn’t a area left, and the vans that left earlier are nonetheless stranded on the freeway,” stated Ahmad.

‘Nothing is transferring’
Fayaz Ahmad Malik, president of the Kashmir fruit growers’ affiliation, stated about 10 p.c of the vans left for New Delhi on Tuesday after a 20-day standstill on the freeway, however hundreds stay caught.
“Our preliminary estimates already run into crores [millions],” he stated, including that the federal government did not take immediate motion when the freeway closure first started, worsening the disaster.
To deal with the disaster, Manoj Sinha, the area’s prime official appointed by New Delhi, on September 15 launched a devoted practice from Budgam station within the central a part of Indian-administered Kashmir to New Delhi to move the fruit, claiming the transfer would “considerably scale back transit time, improve earnings alternatives for hundreds of farmers, and increase the agricultural financial system of the area”.
“It’s basically a parcel coach linked to a passenger practice, not a full-fledged items practice,” a railway official informed Al Jazeera, on situation of anonymity as a result of he was not authorised to talk to the media, including that the practice can carry about 23-24 tonnes of produce every day.
However farmers say the measure provides solely restricted reduction to growers in Kashmir, who produce almost two million tonnes of apples yearly.
“It [the special train] is a optimistic transfer, however with such capability, it would solely carry roughly one truckload of apples per day, which is much lower than what the growers want,” Shakeel Ahmad, an official at a fruit market in Shopian district, informed Al Jazeera.
As anger and frustration over the stalled vans mount, the area’s Chief Minister Omar Abdullah, who has restricted administrative powers in a area managed immediately by New Delhi, on Tuesday stated if the federal authorities can not maintain the freeway operational, its management ought to be handed over to him.
“We’ve got been affected person, ready for day by day assurances that the restoration could be accomplished, however nothing has been completed. Sufficient is sufficient,” Abdullah stated, talking to reporters on September 15 in Srinagar, the area’s largest metropolis.
In the meantime, in a publish on X on September 16, Nitin Gadkari, the federal minister for highway transport and highways, stated greater than 50 earthmovers have been deployed in a round the clock operation to clear and restore the Jammu-Srinagar freeway.
“We’re decided to revive this important nationwide freeway to full energy on the earliest, guaranteeing security and comfort for all highway customers,” he wrote.
However the minister’s assurances present little consolation to Shabir Ahmad, a truck driver at Qazigund, who climbs into his van each morning to examine the apple bins.
“We’ve got been stranded right here for 20 days, and the federal government has proven no urgency in restoring the highway. The losses are past creativeness,” he informed Al Jazeera, including that the authorities ought to have understood it was the height harvest season and acted swiftly.
He stated the farmers who discover their produce is rotten unload it silently and take the highway again, searching for a spot to dispose what as soon as was their season’s laborious work. “Nothing is transferring, and with every passing day, our fruit is popping into waste.”
