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Dal Lake choking under weeds, apathy, official neglect

LCT Desk by LCT Desk
April 8, 2025
in News
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Srinagar, Apr 7: Once the shimmering jewel of Kashmir’s tourism, Dal Lake today presents a picture of decay, choked by weeds and bureaucratic apathy. Despite repeated assurances and crores spent over the years, the lake continues to deteriorate a slow death unfolding in full public view.
Weeds have virtually taken over large portions of the lake, turning the once-pristine waters into floating marshes. Tourists navigating through it now often find themselves dodging muck instead of gliding over clear reflections of the Zabarwan hills.
At the heart of this environmental disaster lies a deep-rooted culture of complacency. The Lakes Conservation and Management Authority (LCMA), the body tasked with preserving Dal Lake, has turned into a revolving door of officials who appear more interested in enjoying their tenure than doing any meaningful work. Every new Chief Executive Officer arrives with fresh promises and leaves with nothing but photo-ops and press releases to show.
Locals are equally complicit. Many Dal dwellers continue to encroach upon the lake, dump waste into its waters, and expand illegal constructions — confident that the enforcement wing will look the other way. Instead of being partners in preservation, a section of the local population has become a part of the problem.
The result is a bureaucratic machinery drawing fat salaries, and a local population that refuses to self-regulate — both contributing to the lake’s downfall. Meanwhile, the weeds keep growing, the water keeps shrinking, and the Dal Lake, once Kashmir’s pride, is now left at the mercy of God.
The situation demands not another committee or seminar, but action — strict accountability from LCMA, real community participation, and above all, political will to save what little is left of this dying lake. [KNT]

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