Kashmir: Where There’s No One to Fish for
By Daanish Bin Nabi Not just the legendary Hurriyat leader Syed Ali Geelani. Not just the hub of separatist activities. The town of Sopore in north Kashmir is also famous for its fish industry. Need it even be said—the situation is grim since the sudden abrogation of the special status of Jammu and Kashmir. “Since August 5, the fish business has been reduced to Rs 4 lakh per day when it was worth between Rs 40 and Rs 50 lakh just prior to that. The market closed and only a few vendors have been allowed to operate by our association; that too, at a few places in Sopore town,” says district president, Baramulla, Farooq Ahmad Dar. Sopore’s fish trade is among Kashmir’s biggest industries, with over 5,000 license-holding Mahageers (fisherman), followed by Bandipora district’s close to 3,000 license holders. The famous Soporian fish is netted from Wular Lake—although encroachments into the water body have distressed many fishermen in recent years. The state has some 93,000 fishe...