JAMMU and KASHMIR S.No Name of Participant Designation Place of Posting District Phone No

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

JAMMU and KASHMIR S.No Name of Participant Designation Place of Posting District Phone No TOT DATABASE STATE :- JAMMU AND KASHMIR S.No Name of Participant Designation Place of posting District Phone no. E-mail Id 1 Dr.M.Muzafar Shora 2 Dr.Iftikhar Munshi 3 Dr.G.M.Tantray 4 Dr.Mushtaq Ahmad Ganai 5 Dr.Prehlad Singh 6 Dr.Danish Ayub Khan 7 Dr.R.S.Charak 8 Dr.L.D.Bhagat 9 Dr.Ravinder Singh Manhas 10 Dr.Rubeena Shaheen 11 Dr.S.M.Kadri 12 Dr.Mohammad Fazil 13 Dr.Rajiv K.Gupta 14 Dr.K.L.Katru 15 Dr.Sham Gopal Gupta Office of the 16 Dr.Rehana Kausar Epidemiologist, RFPTC, Barzulla, Srinagar. 9469671775 [email protected]. 17 Dr.Anjum Afshan DHO Ganderbal CMO Office, Ganderbal 9419004842 [email protected] 18 Dr.Gazalla Talasum DHO Srinagar CMO Office Srinagar, 9419059344 19 Dr.A.D.S.Manhas BMO Jammu 9906279717 [email protected] 20 Dr.Atlaf Hussain MO Bandipora 9796743241 [email protected] 21 Dr.Sonaullah Bhat BMO Distt. Shiopian/Block Keller Kashmir 9622733560 22 Dr.Ghulam Mohd. Physician SWM Hospital, Yand Ladak 9419178675 [email protected], 23 Dr.N.A. Jan DSO/Nodal Officer, IDSP, Budgam Srinagar 9419407881 [email protected] 24 Dr. N.R Mumwalia ZMO PHC, Ramkot Ramkot 9419656756 25 Dr. Bashir Gaash, Epidemiologist ,SNO Directorate of Health Services, 9419089018 [email protected] Kashmir Division Srinagar – 190001 (J&K) TOT DATABASE STATE :- JAMMU AND KASHMIR S.No Name of Participant Designation Place of posting District Phone no. E-mail Id 26 Dr. Baljeet Pathania, S C/o Directorate of Health Services [email protected] Near MLA Hostel Shalimar Road, m state Surveillance Jammu-180001 Officer Jammu 27 Dr. R.S.Wazir, Dy. Chief Medical Office, Kathua- Dy. CMO, Kathua 184101 28 Dr. Tariq Ahmad Padder, C/o Medical Superintendent , 9419053130 [email protected] Distt. Hospital Pulwama Physician 29 Dr. Dildar Ahmed Mir, DHO Srinagar, C/o CMO Srinagar, 9419005151 [email protected] Karan Nagar, Srinagar Kashmir Distt. Health Officer 30 Dr. Mohd. Maqbol Mir CMO Office, Pulwama 9419441697 , District Health Officer 31 Dr. Ibrahim Khan, C/o CMO, Kargil, J & K-194103 9469297697 I/c Distt. Health Officer 32 Dr. Mohd. Ramzan Wani, C/o CMO Kupwar (Kashmir) - 9419036283 Physician Specialist 193222 33 Dr. Mohd. Sajjad Beg C/o CMO, Baramulla, J&K 9469421004 , Distt. Health Officer 34 Dr. Abdul Majid Wani, Distt. Health Officer, C/o CMO Kupwara, Kashmir- 9797758000 Kupwara 193222 35 Dr. Mohamad Sharif Wani, CMO, Doda-182202 9419345765 Distt. Health Officer 36 Dr. P.Wanchuk CMO , Leh-194101 252012, 256462 DHO 37 Dr. Farooq Ahmad Matta Physician Specialist Jawahar Lal Nehru Memorial 9419004340 Hospital, Srinagar-190001 38 Dr. S.M.Kadri Trainer Regional Instt. Of Health & Family 9419010363 [email protected] Welfare, Srinagar-190001 39 Dr. Fayaz Ahmed, Regional Instt. Of Health & Family [email protected] Welfare, (Dhobiwan)-190001 Trainer RIHFW 40 Dr. Pirzada Masarat Distt. Surveillance CMO, Budgan 9419013200 Shaheen, Officer [email protected] 41 Dr. Mohd. Fazil Deputy CMO Deputy CMO, Rajouri, J&K 9419170547 42 Dr. Rakesh Verma, District Hospital Poonch, J &K 094191-26582 Physician Specialist 43 Dr. Bhopinder Singh, O/o CMO, Poonch, J & K-185101 District Health Officer TOT DATABASE STATE :- JAMMU AND KASHMIR S.No Name of Participant Designation Place of posting District Phone no. E-mail Id 44 Dr. Shams UD. DIN Malik, Physician Specialist, SDH Banihia, Distt. Ramban, J & 9419154972 MBBS, MD (Med.) K, Jammu 45 Dr. AB. Rashid Dar, R/o Kanipara, Kulgam, Kashmir- 9419050833 Distt. Health Officer 192231 [email protected] 46 Dr. Arshad Hassan Siddique Incharge Pathologist/ District Hospital, Budgan 9419551777 , Blood Bank Officer (Kashmir)- 191111 [email protected] 47 Dr. Vijay Kumar Sahni, Medical Officer Medical Officer, Epidemiology, 09419007717, Directorate of Health Services 09419415116 Jammu, J&K 48 Dr. Mohamad Younus Sub District Hospital, Gangan 09419423930, [email protected] Shah,list Physician Specia 9622540888 49 Dr. Ishfaq Ahmad Dar, C/o Chief Medical Officer, 9906509195 [email protected] District Health Officer Anantnag 50 Dr. Kaiser Ahmed Wani, Epidemiology, Directorate of Health Services, Kashmir -190001 Microbiologist 51 Dr.Parwaiz Sajjad Shah, SDH Bandipore, Distt Bandipore, 9797218786 Physician Specialist J&K-193502 52 Dr. Basharat Ahmad Distt. Hospital, Kulgam (J &K)- 9419415015 Sheikh, Asstt. Surgeon 192231 53 Dr. Bipin Kr. Sudan, Distt. Hospital Kathua (J & K) 09419208008, 09419198780 Physician 54 Dr. Shaukat Ahmad CMO, CMO, Gandrebel, Srinagar, Jowhari, Kashmir.
Recommended publications
  • Making Borders Irrelevant in Kashmir Will Be Swift and That India-Pakistan Relations Will Rapidly Improve Could Lead to Frustrations
    UNiteD StateS iNStitUte of peaCe www.usip.org SpeCial REPORT 1200 17th Street NW • Washington, DC 20036 • 202.457.1700 • fax 202.429.6063 ABOUT THE REPO R T P. R. Chari and Hasan Askari Rizvi This report analyzes the possibilities and practicalities of managing the Kashmir conflict by “making borders irrelevant”—softening the Line of Control to allow the easy movement of people, goods, and services across it. The report draws on the results of a survey of stakeholders and Making Borders public opinion on both sides of the Line of Control. The results of that survey, together with an initial draft of this report, were shown to a group of opinion makers in both countries (former bureaucrats and diplomats, members of the irrelevant in Kashmir armed forces, academics, and members of the media), whose comments were valuable in refining the report’s conclusions. P. R. Chari is a research professor at the Institute Summary for Peace and Conflict Studies in New Delhi and a former member of the Indian Administrative Service. Hasan Askari • Neither India nor Pakistan has been able to impose its preferred solution on the Rizvi is an independent political and defense consultant long-standing Kashmir conflict, and both sides have gradually shown more flexibility in Pakistan and is currently a visiting professor with the in their traditional positions on Kashmir, without officially abandoning them. This South Asia Program of the School of Advanced International development has encouraged the consideration of new, creative approaches to the Studies, Johns Hopkins University. management of the conflict. This report was commissioned by the Center • The approach holding the most promise is a pragmatic one that would “make for Conflict Mediation and Resolution at the United States borders irrelevant”—softening borders to allow movement of people, goods, and Institute of Peace.
    [Show full text]
  • Press Information Bureau Government of India ***** Maps of Newly Formed Union Territories of Jammu Kashmir and Ladakh, with the Map of India
    Press Information Bureau Government of India ***** Maps of newly formed Union Territories of Jammu Kashmir and Ladakh, with the map of India New Delhi, November 2, 2019 On the recommendation of Parliament, the President effectively dismantled Article 370 of the Indian Constitution and gave assent to the Jammu and Kashmir Reorganization Act, 2019. Under the leadership of Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi and supervision of Union Home Minister Shri Amit Shah, the former state of Jammu & Kashmir has been reorganized as the new Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir and the new Union Territory of Ladakh on 31st October 2019. The new Union Territory of Ladakh consists of two districts of Kargil and Leh. The rest of the former State of Jammu and Kashmir is in the new Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir. In 1947, the former State of Jammu and Kashmir had the following 14 districts - Kathua, Jammu, Udhampur, Reasi, Anantnag, Baramulla, Poonch, Mirpur, Muzaffarabad, Leh and Ladakh, Gilgit, Gilgit Wazarat, Chilhas and Tribal Territory. By 2019, the state government of former Jammu and Kashmir had reorganized the areas of these 14 districts into 28 districts. The names of the new districts are as follows - Kupwara, Bandipur, Ganderbal, Srinagar, Budgam, Pulwama, Shupian, Kulgam, Rajouri, Ramban, Doda, Kishtivar, Samba and Kargil. Out of these, Kargil district was carved out from the area of Leh and Ladakh district. The Leh district of the new Union Territory of Ladakh has been defined in the Jammu and Kashmir Reorganization (Removal of Difficulties) Second Order, 2019, issued by the President of India, to include the areas of the districts of Gilgit, Gilgit Wazarat, Chilhas and Tribal Territory of 1947, in addition to the remaining areas of Leh and Ladakh districts of 1947, after carving out the Kargil District.
    [Show full text]
  • Karakorum Himalaya: Sourcebook for a Protected Area
    7 Karakorum Himalaya: Sourcebook for a Protected Area Nigel J. R. Allan 8 The views expressed in this publication are not necessarily those of IUCN. IUCN-The World Conservation Union, Pakistan 1 Bath Island Road, Karachi 75530 © 1995 by IUCN-The World Conservation Union, Pakistan All rights reserved ISBN 969-8141-13-8 Contents Preface v Introduction 1 1 HISTORY Natural Heritage 11 Geology 11 Glaciology 14 Associative Cultural Landscape 17 Local Ideas and Beliefs about Mountains 17 Culturally Specific Communication Networks 20 2 DESCRIPTION AND INVENTORY Physiography and Climate 23 Flora 24 Fauna 25 Juridical and Management Qualities 29 3 PHOTOGRAPHIC AND CARTOGRAPHIC DOCUMENTATION Historial Photographs 33 Large Format Books 33 Landscape Paintings 33 Maps and Nomenclature 34 4 PUBLIC AWARENESS Records of Expeditions 37 World Literature and History 43 Tourism 52 Scientific and Census Reports 56 Guidebooks 66 International Conflict 66 5 RELATED BIBLIOGRAPHIC MATERIALS 69 Author Index 71 Place Index 81 iii iv4 5 Preface This sourcebook for a protected area has its origins in a lecture I gave at the Environment and Policy Institute of the East-West Center in Honolulu in 1987. The lecture was about my seasons of field work in the Karakorum Himalaya. Norton Ginsberg, the director of the Institute, alerted me to the fact that the Encyclopedia Britannica would be revising their entries on Asian mountains shortly and suggested that I update the Karakorum entry. The eventual publication of that entry under my name (Allan 1992), however, omitted most of the literature references I had accumulated. As my reference list continued to expand I decided to order them in some coherent fashion and publish them as a sourcebook to coincide with the IUCN workshop on mountain protected areas in Skardu in September 1994.
    [Show full text]
  • List of Publications
    List of Publications: 2021: 1. Majeed, U., Rashid, I., Sattar, A., Allen, S., Stoffel, M., Nüsser, M., & Schmidt, S. (2021). Recession of Gya Glacier and the 2014 glacial lake outburst flood in the Trans-Himalayan region of Ladakh, India. Science of The Total Environment, 756, 144008. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.144008 [IF- 6.5] 2020: 2. Rashid, I., & Majeed, U. (2020). Retreat and geodetic mass changes of Zemu Glacier, Sikkim Himalaya, India, between 1931 and 2018. Regional Environmental Change, 20(4), 1-13. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10113-020-01717-3 [IF- 3.4 ] 3. Rashid, I., Majeed, U., Aneaus, S., Cánovas, J. A. B., Stoffel, M., Najar, N. A., ... & Lotus, S. (2020). Impacts of Erratic Snowfall on Apple Orchards in Kashmir Valley, India. Sustainability, 12(21), 9206. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12219206 [IF- 2.5 ] 4. Murtaza, K. O., Dar, R. A., Paul, O. J., Bhat, N. A., & Romshoo, S. A. (2020). Glacial geomorphology and recent glacial recession of the Harmukh Range, NW Himalaya. Quaternary International. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2020.08.044 [IF- 2] 5. Romshoo, S. A., Amin, M., Sastry, K. L. N., & Parmar, M. (2020). Integration of social, economic and environmental factors in GIS for land degradation vulnerability assessment in the Pir Panjal Himalaya, Kashmir, India. Applied Geography, 125, 102307.https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apgeog.2020.102307 [IF- 3.5 ] 6. Rashid, I., & Aneaus, S. (2020). Landscape transformation of an urban wetland in Kashmir Himalaya, India using high-resolution remote sensing data, geospatial modeling, and ground observations over the last 5 decades (1965–2018).
    [Show full text]
  • SRINAGAR DISTRICT, JAMMU & KASHMIR March 2013
    GOVERNMENT OF INDIA MINISTRY OF WATER RESOURCES CENTRAL GROUND WATER BOARD GROUND WATER INFORMATION BOOKLET OF SRINAGAR DISTRICT, JAMMU & KASHMIR March 2013 CONTENTS SRINAGAR DISTRICT AT A GLANCE 1.0 INTRODUCTION 2.0 CLIMATE AND RAINFALL 3.0 GEOMORPHOLOGY AND SOILS 4.0 GROUND WATER SCENARIO 4.1 Geology 4.2 Hydrogeology 4.3 Depth to water level 4.4 Springs 4.5 Ground Water Resources 4.6 Ground Water Quality 4.7 Status of Ground Water Development 5.0 GROUND WATER MANAGEMENT STRATEGY 5.1 Ground Water Development 5.2 Snow Water Harvesting & Artificial Recharge 6.0 GROUND WATER RELATED ISSUES & PROBLEMS 7.0 AWARENESS & TRAINING ACTIVITY 8.0 AREAS NOTIFIED BY CGWA / SGWA 9.0 RECOMMENDATIONS SRINAGAR DISTRICT AT A GLANCE GENERAL INFORMATION Old Srinagar district including new Srinagar and 1. Ganderbal districts i) Geographical area (sq km) 2,228 ii) Administrative Divisions (2009-10) • Number of Tehsil 3 • Number of CD Blocks 5 • Number of Panchayats 113 • Number of Villages 170 iii) Population (2001 Census) • Total population 12,02,447 Persons • Population Density (per/sq km) 540 • SC Population 1,065 Persons • ST Population 45,427 Persons • Sex Ratio 851 • Muslims and Other Population 94.66% and 5.34% iv) Average Annual Rainfall- 2011 (mm) 671 mm GEOMORPHOLOGY 2. i) Major Physiographic units • High Hill Ranges • Valleys & Terraces ii) Important Lakes • Dal , Anchar iii) Important Hill Range • Zabarvan mountains, Hari Parbat iv) Altitude • 1730 m amsl v) Major Drainages • Basin Indus • Sub Basin Jhelum vi) Rivers Jhelum, Kankanag,Sindh 3. LAND USE (2009-10) (Sq.KM) • Forest area 380 • Net area sown 388 4.
    [Show full text]
  • 1 Curiculum Vitae Ghulam Jeelani Department of Earth Sciences University of Kashmir Srinagar, 190006, India. Contact: +91-1
    CV_ Jeelani Curiculum Vitae Department of Earth Sciences University of Kashmir Ghulam Jeelani Srinagar, 190006, India. Contact: +91-194-2422543 (O); +91-194-2424146 (Fax) +91-9419013565 (Mobile), +917006316171 [email protected]; [email protected] EDUCATION 2010-11 Post Doc University of Kansas, Lawrence USA 2000 Ph. D. (Geology) Aligarh Muslim University, Aligarh, India 1997 M. Sc. (Geology) 1st Division Aligarh Muslim University, Aligarh, India 1994 B. Sc. (Geology) 1st Division University of Kashmir, Srinagar, India PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE 14.11.2016 to till date Professor, Dept. of Earth Sciences, University of Kashmir 14.11.2013 to 13.11.2016 Associate Professor, Dept. of Earth Sciences, University of Kashmir 31.03.2013 to 13.11.2013 Senior Assistant Professor (Stage III), Dept. of Earth Sciences, University of Kashmir 31.03.2008 to 30.03.2013 Senior Assistant Professor (Stage II), Dept. of Earth Sciences, University of Kashmir 01.09.2010 to 30.04.2011 Post Doc, The University of Kansas, Lawrence Kansas, USA 31.03.2004 to 30.03.2008 Assistant Professor (Stage I), Dept. of Geology & Geophysics, University of Kashmir April 2001 to March 2004 Contractual Lecturer, Dept. of Geology & Geophysics, University of Kashmir 1 CV_ Jeelani Associate Editor: Hydrological Sciences Journal (HSJ) Published by Taylor and Francis PROFESSIONAL AFFILIATION Member Life Member Indian Geological Congress (IGC) American Geophysical Union (AGU) International Association of Hydrogeologists (IAH) International Association of Hydrological Sciences (IAHS) Indian National Science Academy (INSA) Working Group on Climate Change, University of Kashmir ACADEMIC HONOR/AWARDS 2016, 2018, 2019 • Visiting Scientist PRL, Ahmedabad 2010-11 • Fulbright-Nehru Senior Research Fellow 2008-09 • INSA-Visiting Fellow 2006 • Excellent Grade Teacher Award by IQAC (University of Kashmir) 2002 • NET, CSIR/UGC.
    [Show full text]
  • A Review of the Status of Saussurea Costus
    PC19 Inf. 7 English only / Únicamente en inglés / Seulement en anglais CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA CONVENCIÓN SOBRE EL COMERCIO INTERNACIONAL DE ESPECIES AMENAZADAS DE FAUNA Y FLORA SILVESTRES CONVENTION SUR LE COMMERCE INTERNATIONAL DES ESPECES DE FAUNE ET DE FLORE SAUVAGES MENACEES D'EXTINCTION ____________ Nineteenth meeting of the Plants Committee – Geneva (Switzerland), 18-21 April 2011 Decimonovena reunión del Comité de Flora – Ginebra (Suiza), 18-21 de abril de 2011 Dix-neuvième session du Comité pour les plantes – Genève (Suisse), 18 – 21 avril 2011 A REVIEW OF THE STATUS OF SAUSSUREA COSTUS The attached information document has been submitted by the CITES Secretariat1. El documento informativo adjunto ha sido presentado por la Secretaría CITES2. Le document d'information joint est soumis par le Secrétariat CITES3. 1 The geographical designations employed in this document do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the CITES Secretariat or the United Nations Environment Programme concerning the legal status of any country, territory, or area, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. The responsibility for the contents of the document rests exclusively with its author. 2 Las denominaciones geográficas empleadas en este documento no implican juicio alguno por parte de la Secretaría CITES o del Programa de las Naciones Unidas para el Medio Ambiente sobre la condición jurídica de ninguno de los países, zonas o territorios citados, ni respecto de la delimitación de sus fronteras o límites. La responsabilidad sobre el contenido del documento incumbe exclusivamente a su autor.
    [Show full text]
  • CV-Zafar a Reshi
    Curriculum Vitae 1. General Information Surname: Reshi Given Name: Zafar Ahmad Date of Birth: 02-03-1961 Correspondence Address: Department of Botany University of Kashmir, Srinagar-190 006, Jammu & Kashmir, India Contact No. Mobile: 09419043273 Email: [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] 2. Educational Qualification: M.Sc (Botany); M.Phil; Ph.D 3. Employment Details: Position Name of Period Experience Nature of held organisation From To work Professor Department of 26-12- Till date Teaching and Botany, University 2009 About 7 years Research of Kashmir Associate About 8 years Professor Department of 6-08- 26-12- Teaching and Botany, University 2001 2009 Research of Kashmir Senior Department of 6-8-1996 6-08- 5 years Assistant Botany, University 2001 Teaching and Professor of Kashmir Research Assistant Department of 15-4- 6-8-1996 About 5 years Teaching and Professor Botany, University 1991 Research of Kashmir Curator Department of 1985 1991 About 6 years Survey, Botany, University collection of Kashmir and identification of plants Teaching Experience: 22 years Research Experience: 27 years 1 6. Administrative responsibilities S. No. Position Organization Duration From To 1. Dean Research University of May, 12, 2017 Continuing Kashmir 2 Registrar -do- October 2012 June 2015 3 Head of Department -do- February 2010 October 2012 4 Honorary Director, -do- February 2010 October 2012 Centre of Plant Taxonomy 5 Co-ordinator, NABET -do- January 2013 Till date Accredited EIA Team 6 Assistant Coordinator, -do- 2007 2010 Directorate of Internal Quality Assurance (DIQA) Other assignments 1. Approved as Functional Area Expert by the National Accreditation Board for Education & Training, Quality Control of India, New Delhi.
    [Show full text]
  • Jammu and Kashmir
    Jammu and Kashmir Jammu and Kashmir, commonly known as Kashmir, territory in the north-western part of the Indian subcontinent bounded on the north-west by Afghanistan, on the north-east by China, on the south by the Indian states of Himachal Pradesh and Punjab, and on the west by the North-West Frontier and Punjab provinces of Pakistan. Kashmir has an area of about 222,236 sq km (85,806 sq mi). Both India and Pakistan claim all of Kashmir, but the territory has been partitioned between them since 1947. India controls the southern half of Kashmir, which it has organized as the state of Jammu and Kashmir. Before India's defeat in the 1962 Sino-Indian War, the state of Jammu and Kashmir also included the north-eastern section of the territory, which India still claims as part of Jammu and Kashmir State, but which has since been occupied by China as Aksai Chin. Pakistan controls the northern and western portion of Kashmir which is organized into three main regions: Azad (Free) Kashmir, occupying the crescent of land on the western border of Kashmir, between the state of Jammu and Kashmir on the east and Pakistan on the west; and Gilgit and Baltistan (the Northern Areas) located in the Karakorum Range in the far north-west. Azad Kashmir has a government protected and financed by Pakistan; Gilgit and Baltistan are notionally autonomous, but in practice are administered by political agents of the Pakistani government. The capital of the state of Jammu and Kashmir is Srinagar. The administrative centre of Azad Kashmir is Muzaffarabad; Gilgit town and Skardu are respectively the capitals of Gilgit and Baltistan.
    [Show full text]
  • Counter Terrorist Trends and Analyses
    Counter Terrorist Trends and Analyses www.rsis.edu.sg ISSN 2382-6444 | Volume 11, Issue 4 | April 2019 A JOURNAL OF THE INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR POLITICAL VIOLENCE AND TERRORISM RESEARCH (ICPVTR) Profile of Jaish-e-Muhammad and Leader Masood Azhar Farhan Zahid The Pulwama Attack: Significance, Implications and Way Forward Mohammed Sinan Siyech Can Kashmir Turn into Another Marawi? An Assessment Damien D Cheong and Neo Loo Seng Implications of Possible United States Withdrawal on the South Asian Militant Landscape Abdul Basit and Sara Mahmood Counter Terrorist Trends and Analyses Volume 9, Issue 4 | April 2017 1 Building a Global Network for Security Editorial Note South Asian Militant Landscape in the Context of the Pulwama Attack and its Aftermath The suicide attack on India’s paramilitary JeM’s enhanced operational capabilities. Central Reserved Police Force (CRPF) in Accumulating 80 kilograms of highly explosive Kashmir’s Pulwama district has once again ‘RDX’ and preparing a VBIED signify the exposed the sharp fault-lines between India expertise of JeM’s cadres. The suicide bomber and Pakistan, pushing them to the brink of war. Adil Rashid Dar was a local Kashmiri, whom The February 2019 attack, claimed by JeM had recruited by exploiting his anger and Pakistan-based anti-India militant group, Jaish- quest for revenge against the Indian state to e-Muhammad (JeM), killed 40 CRPF serve its agenda of ‘liberating’ Kashmir. After personnel. This attack and its aftermath witnessing a dip between 2008 and 2013, underscores a new phase of militancy in violence and militant recruitment have spiked violence-ridden Kashmir and renewed in Kashmir since 2015.
    [Show full text]
  • Glacier Area Change Over Past 50 Years to Stable Phase in Drass Valley, Ladakh Himalaya (India)
    American Journal of Climate Change, 2016, 5, 88-102 Published Online March 2016 in SciRes. http://www.scirp.org/journal/ajcc http://dx.doi.org/10.4236/ajcc.2016.51010 Glacier Area Change over Past 50 Years to Stable Phase in Drass Valley, Ladakh Himalaya (India) M. N. Koul1, I. M. Bahuguna2, Ajai2, A. S. Rajawat2, Sadiq Ali1, Sumit Koul3 1Department of Geography, University of Jammu, Jammu, India 2Space Application Centre, Ahmadabad, India 3Department of Statistics, University of Jammu, Jammu, India Received 28 July 2015; accepted 28 March 2016; published 31 March 2016 Copyright © 2016 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution International License (CC BY). http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Abstract Glaciers are dynamic reservoirs of constantly exchanging mass with parts of global hydrological system, process by which glaciers gain or lose snow and ice and establish a link between climate, glacier mass and glacier fluvial dynamics related directly to the behaviour of climate. Here, we report on glacier status over the past 50 years (1962-2013) on remotely-sensed volumetric changes of glaciers in Drass glacier basin, Ladakh Mountain, North-West Himalaya. Drass basin houses 150 glaciers of different dimensions predominantly (nearly 75%) by small sized glaciers. The glaciers monitored on multi-temporal satellite images of the year’s 2001, 2013 for short-term basis, and, Survey of India topographic sheets of 1965 (surveyed in 1963) on long-term basis. Machoi glacier has been selected for detailed study to assess health and fluctuation record on which observation has been made since the year 1875.
    [Show full text]
  • Kashmir: Background, Recent Developments, and U.S
    Kashmir: Background, Recent Developments, and U.S. Policy K. Alan Kronstadt Specialist in South Asian Affairs August 16, 2019 Congressional Research Service 7-.... www.crs.gov R45877 SUMMARY R45877 Kashmir: Background, Recent Developments, August 16, 2019 and U.S. Policy K. Alan Kronstadt In early August 2019, the Indian government announced that it would make major Specialist in South Asian changes to the legal status of its Muslim-majority Jammu and Kashmir (J&K) state, Affairs specifically by repealing Article 370 of the Indian Constitution, which provided the state [email protected] “special” autonomous status, and by bifurcating the state into two successor “Union For a copy of the full report, Territories” with more limited indigenous administrative powers. The former princely please call 7-.... or visit region’s sovereignty has been unsettled since 1947 and its territory is divided by a www.crs.gov. military “Line of Control,” with Pakistan controlling about one-third and disputing India’s claim over most of the remainder as J&K (China also claims some of the region’s land). The United Nations considers J&K to be disputed territory, but New Delhi, the status quo party, calls the recent legal changes an internal matter, and it generally opposes third-party involvement in the Kashmir issue. U.S. policy seeks to prevent conflict between India and Pakistan from escalating, and the U.S. Congress supports a U.S.-India strategic partnership that has been underway since 2005, while also maintaining attention on issues of human rights and religious freedom. India’s August actions sparked international controversy as “unilateral” changes of J&K’s status that could harm regional stability, eliciting U.S.
    [Show full text]