Close X
Monday, November 4, 2024
ADVT 
India

World's 'Highest' Village In Spiti Valley Runs Dry As Global Warming Hits The Himalayas

Darpan News Desk IANS, 01 Aug, 2017 01:29 PM
    With a backdrop of the snow-capped Himalayas stretched out across a vibrant blue sky, it is hard to dispute the sign as you enter Komik that declares it to be the world's highest village with a road.
     
     
    Others also boast the title — from Nepal's Dho Tarap to Bolivia's Santa Barbara. But at 4,587 metre (15,050 ft), this remote Buddhist hamlet near India's border with Tibet is no doubt among the planet's topmost motorable human settlements.
     
     
    Yet despite its coveted status, life is harsh for the 130 residents of Komik, a quaint collection of whitewashed mud-and-stone houses located in the desolate Spiti Valley.
     
     
    The region is a cold trans-Himalayan desert cut off from the rest of India for six months of the year when snowfall blocks mountain passes. Phone and internet connectivity is almost non-existent. Schools and clinics are a tough trek away.
     
     
    But Spiti's some 12,000 inhabitants, who eke out a living farming green peas and barley, have a much bigger concern: their main sources of water — streams, rivers, ponds — are drying up.
     
     
    "We are used to being in a remote place. We have our traditional ways of living," said farmer Nawang Phunchok, 32, as he sat tying bundles of a prickly desert bush together to insulate the local monastery's roof.
     
     
    "But these days the water is not coming like it used to. The seasons are changing. We see there is less water than before." There is little doubt India is facing a water crisis.
     
     
    Decades of over-extraction of ground water, wasteful and inefficient irrigation practices, pollution of surface water like lakes and rivers, and erratic weather patterns attributed to climate change, have left many parts of the country thirsty.
     
     
    But while government, charities and media increasingly focus on the drought-stricken farmers in the plains, their Himalayan counterparts — ironically living in a region often called the "Water Towers of Asia" — also need help, say conservationists.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Sikh Radicals Raise Khalistan Slogans, Clash With SGPC As Harjit Sajjan Visits Harmandir Sahib

    Sikh Radicals Raise Khalistan Slogans, Clash With SGPC As Harjit Sajjan Visits Harmandir Sahib
    The Canadian Defence Minister avoided the radical elements and was received by top SGPC functionaries, including its President Kirpal Singh Badungar, to a red carpet welcome

    Sikh Radicals Raise Khalistan Slogans, Clash With SGPC As Harjit Sajjan Visits Harmandir Sahib

    10 ISIS Suspects Held After Police Raids At Mumbai, Jalandhar, 4 Other Places

    10 ISIS Suspects Held After Police Raids At Mumbai, Jalandhar, 4 Other Places
    Ten suspected Islamic State sympathisers were arrested while several others were detained during joint anti-terror raids on Thursday in four states for plotting major terror strikes, a senior police officer said.

    10 ISIS Suspects Held After Police Raids At Mumbai, Jalandhar, 4 Other Places

    Capt Amarinder Singh Meets PM Modi, Seeks Nod To Sell Power To Pakistan, Nepal

    Capt Amarinder Singh Meets PM Modi, Seeks Nod To Sell Power To Pakistan, Nepal
    Punjab Chief Minister Capt Amarinder Singh on Thursday sought Prime Minister Narendra Modi's intervention to allow the Punjab government to sell surplus power to Pakistan or Nepal in the financial interest of the cash-strapped state.

    Capt Amarinder Singh Meets PM Modi, Seeks Nod To Sell Power To Pakistan, Nepal

    Rahul Gandhi Unfit To Lead: Jolt For Congress, Barkha Singh Quits Party Post, Blames Rahul, Maken

    Rahul Gandhi Unfit To Lead: Jolt For Congress, Barkha Singh Quits Party Post, Blames Rahul, Maken
    In another setback to the Delhi Congress with the civic polls due on Sunday, its women wing chief Barkha Singh quit the post, and hit out at Congress Vice President Rahul Gandhi and the party's Delhi unit chief Ajay Maken.

    Rahul Gandhi Unfit To Lead: Jolt For Congress, Barkha Singh Quits Party Post, Blames Rahul, Maken

    SEE PICS: Harjit Singh Sajjan At Harmandar Sahib, Gets Cold Shoulder From Punjab Government

    SEE PICS: Harjit Singh Sajjan At Harmandar Sahib, Gets Cold Shoulder From Punjab Government
    No Punjab minister or senior state government official either welcomed Sajjan to his native state or accompanied him on his visits to various places, including to the Harmandar Sahib (Golden Temple) or to his native village Bombeli in Hoshiarpur district

    SEE PICS: Harjit Singh Sajjan At Harmandar Sahib, Gets Cold Shoulder From Punjab Government

    Capt Amarinder-led Punjab Government Scraps Khalsa University Act

    Capt Amarinder-led Punjab Government Scraps Khalsa University Act
    The Punjab government has decided to scrap the controversial Khalsa University Act, 2016, "to save the Khalsa College from losing its heritage status by falling prey to privatisation".

    Capt Amarinder-led Punjab Government Scraps Khalsa University Act