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Tourism In Indian Kashmir Is Clearly Winning The Battle Against Covid-19

In a contest between regulating tourist inflow into Jammu and Kashmir and the fight against a resurgent COVID-19 wave, tourism appears to be winning.

Manoj Sinha, the region’s Lt. Governor, said on April 3 that despite a surge in COVID-19 cases, tourism “would be taken to new heights.”

When his statement, which was prominently headlined in local newspapers, was being read the next morning, the government ordered schools to suspend classes up to grade 9 for 15 days, even classes were held only three times a week alternately while adhering to several other safety measures.

On April 5, the leaves sanctioned or those under consideration to doctors, nurses and paramedics were also canceled, given the surge in COVID-19 cases.

Amir Ali, the director of the disaster management department, recently posted a photo on his Facebook account of Indian tourists and local visitors huddled outside the gate of the Tulip Garden in Srinagar, whose opening in the spring has become a big event on the tourist calendar. “Cov-Idiots at Tulip Garden today,” he wrote.

Successive Indian governments have likened a higher number of tourists visiting the Himalayan valley as a sign of normalcy. But the past 30 years of insurgency, punctuated by the most intense uprisings in 2008, 2010 and 2016, have shown how fragile peace could be.

After scrapping the country’s autonomous status in 2019, raising fears of ethnic flooding by Hindus, New Delhi is keen on demonstrating to the world that the region is peaceful amid several damning UN reports highlighting repressive measures, curbs on freedoms and rights violations since 2019.

Map-Jammu-Kashmir

Several delegations of foreign envoys have been taken on “guided tours” of some areas of the region since August 2019.

“Peace has returned to Kashmir after so many decades. It’s time we must cash in on this,” Lt. Governor Sinha said, after inaugurating a six-day “Tulip Festival” at the tulip garden, believed to be Asia’s largest.

In a tweet, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi also urged his countrymen and foreigners to visit the garden in large numbers.

More than $100 million have been earmarked for tourism promotion in this financial year’s budget of the region, and security has been promised to Bollywood producers for shooting films in the region.

Kashmir’s economy suffered losses worth millions of dollars because of a military and communications lockdown imposed by the Indian government after Aug. 5, 2019, when it scrapped its special status, and later because of COVID-19 restrictions.

Therefore, traders associated with the tourism industry, as well as hoteliers, recently urged the government to give up any thought of another lockdown.

But authorities have been criticized for lax COVID-19 measures, especially regarding the events that strengthen its “normalcy” narrative.

Two outside tourists died of COVID-19 at Srinagar hospitals during the past 10 days. Both had tested negative on arrival at Srinagar airport, where each incoming traveler is tested using the rapid antigen test (RAT), which is not as accurate as of the reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RTPCR) method.

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