logo
Army chief reviews security preparedness of Amarnath Yatra

Army chief reviews security preparedness of Amarnath Yatra

Hindustan Times22-06-2025
Jun 22, 2025 06:19 PM IST
Chief of Army Staff (COAS) General Upendra Dwivedi reviewed the security in the Kashmir region and assessed preparedness for the upcoming Amarnath Yatra, the Indian Army said on Sunday. Chief of Army Staff General Upendra Dwivedi reviews the security grid in the Kashmir region and assess preparedness for the upcoming Amarnath Yatra on Sunday. (ANI)
Additional Directorate General of Public Information (ADGPI) shared on X that General Dwivedi was briefed about the operational preparedness. 'He was briefed on the current operational dynamics and the broader strategic landscape, including a demonstration on integration of advanced technologies in operations, leading to smarter decisions, enhanced surveillance and response mechanisms,' the post by ADGPI said.
It said that the chief also lauded all ranks of Chinar Corps for their commitment in ensuring peace and stability through decisive counter-terror operations and initiatives aimed at development of the region & upliftment of local population.
The annual Hindu pilgrimage to the Amarnath cave shrine in south Kashmir Himalayas is commencing from July 3 this year. Every year lakhs of pilgrims visit the shrine which is at a height of 3,880 metre in south Kashmir Himalayas passing through treacherous mountain passes and ice fed streams.
The government this year declared the Amarnath Yatra routes as no-flying zones from July 1 to August 10, banning drones, balloons and other objects. Consequently, the Shrine Amarnath Yatra Shrine Board on June 18 announced that there will no helicopter services for pilgrims during the yatra.
All pilgrims planning to visit the shrine this year will have to trek on foot or avail the services of ponies and palkis from both Pahalgam and Baltal base camps.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Kishtwar Cloudburst: Pilgrims Were Eating Langar, Resting Next To Nullah When Flash Floods Hit
Kishtwar Cloudburst: Pilgrims Were Eating Langar, Resting Next To Nullah When Flash Floods Hit

News18

time10 hours ago

  • News18

Kishtwar Cloudburst: Pilgrims Were Eating Langar, Resting Next To Nullah When Flash Floods Hit

Last Updated: Pilgrims were standing in and around the nullah and waiting for langar were swept away when the cloud burst and the nullah swelled. Groups of pilgrims were scattered in and around the Jasnai nullah and were sitting in setups, collecting food from a community kitchen, popularly known as langar, when flash floods washed them away following a cloudburst in Jammu and Kashmir's Kishtwar on Thursday. The flash floods have claimed over 46 lives and injured over a hundred people. Over several dozens are being rescued. Officials said that rescue efforts are being hindered due to incessant rain in the region. According to reports by the Indian Express and the Hindustan Times, the pilgrims were gathered at Chasoti village. The village is a key stop on the pilgrimage to the Hindu shrine Machail Mata Mandir. 'The deluge hit a community kitchen set up for the pilgrims where 100 to 150 pilgrims were having food," an officer speaking to the Hindustan Times said. The Jasnai nullah is a regular stop along the pilgrimage route to the Chandi Mata temple in Paddar. The pilgrimage began on July 25, and so far more than 1.3 lakh devotees have visited the shrine. This weekend is especially significant, as the number of pilgrims rises sharply. Each year, on the first Bhadon or Bhadoon Sankranti (August 15 or 16), devotees from across Paddar gather outside the temple in Machail to offer prayers and seek blessings, according to the shrine's website. Local residents said the cloudburst struck between noon and 1 pm, when a large number of pilgrims had gathered at Chositi, the last motorable point before the Kali Mata temple in Machail, located at 2,880 metres. Pilgrims parked their vehicles at Chositi, where makeshift shops and a langar were set up, and continued to the temple on foot along the Jasnai nullah. When the cloudburst hit, many were either standing in the nullah or resting at the langar. Within seconds, the water level surged, sweeping away numerous devotees, locals said, leaving little time for anyone to react. view comments First Published: Disclaimer: Comments reflect users' views, not News18's. Please keep discussions respectful and constructive. Abusive, defamatory, or illegal comments will be removed. News18 may disable any comment at its discretion. By posting, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

Machail Mata yatris were gathered for langar when flash floods hit: What we know on disaster after Kishtwar cloudburst
Machail Mata yatris were gathered for langar when flash floods hit: What we know on disaster after Kishtwar cloudburst

Hindustan Times

time12 hours ago

  • Hindustan Times

Machail Mata yatris were gathered for langar when flash floods hit: What we know on disaster after Kishtwar cloudburst

Large groups of pilgrims were gathered at Chasoti village in J&K's Kishtwar, a key stop on the pilgrimage to the Hindu shrine Machail Mata Mandir, and collecting food from a langar (community kitchen) when flash floods washed them away on Thursday. A survivor of the flash floods that occurred by the banks of the Chashoti Nullah following a cloudburst in Kishtwar on Thursday. (ANI Video Grab ) Triggered reportedly by a cloudburst, the flash floods claimed at least 37 lives, deputy commissioner Pankaj Kumar Sharma told HT. More than 100 people are injured, while more than 60 have so far been rescued, officials added. The death toll is likely to rise as rescue efforts are hindered by continuous rain. The disaster took place by the banks of Chishoti Nullah, a rivulet, a stopover on the popular pilgrimage route to the temple in Padder area. The pilgrimage began on July 25 this year, and over 130,000 (1.3 lakh) pilgrims have already paid obeisance. 'The deluge hit a community kitchen set up for the pilgrims where 100 to 150 pilgrims were having food,' an officer said.

Rooted in two soils
Rooted in two soils

New Indian Express

time17 hours ago

  • New Indian Express

Rooted in two soils

"We stay in Rajouri Garden," she said with a warm, easy smile. I nodded, knowing the next question would come. "So are you originally from there as well?" Her smile faltered, just for the smallest moment. Almost nothing, but I caught it. "We are originally from Swat in Pakistan," she said, her voice steady, though something else rested just beneath it. Like so many Punjabi families who had come to Delhi after Partition, I assumed her story was one of displacement inherited from an earlier generation. But Padma Makhija, forty-five, had moved to India only in 2004, when she married. Her parents and siblings still live in the Swat Valley, one of the last threads in the small Hindu community that remains there. "I had visited India before, because many of our relatives live here," she told me. "But now I am an Indian citizen, while my family is still in the valley." Her words stirred something I had not expected. My surprise was not born of the well-worn tensions between our two countries, but from meeting someone who was young enough to remember the land my own grandparents had left behind. She was not a sepia photograph in an album, nor a story softened by retelling. She was a living bridge to that place as it exists now—the scent of its earth after rain, the sharpness of its winter air, the rhythm of its seasons. "Every time I visit the mountains with my family, my thoughts drift to the Swat Valley and its breathtaking beauty," she said softly. "It takes me back to the home where I grew up, to the landscapes etched in my memory. There is a beauty that binds both places, a beauty that feels whole and eternal, and yet they are worlds apart, held back from each other by borders and the politics between them." Her husband, Anil, came to Delhi much earlier. He was eighteen when his family left Mardan in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa in the early 1980s. Today, the two of them run a business in the labyrinth of Sadar Bazaar, but the flavours of home travel with them. Many of the dishes they cook are shared across the border, but some are rooted so deeply in that region that making them is almost an act of remembering. Anil described his kadhai mutton—just meat, tomatoes, ghee, green chillies, and salt—slow-cooked for hours until the flavours sink into one another. "Kadhai is so common there," he said, smiling at the thought. "I remember how we would all sit together and polish it off. That memory we keep alive here too." While Anil's family is now entirely in India, Padma's heart moves between here and the valley she left. "I fondly remember the mote chawal ki khichdi with desi ghee that my mother would make for us. That is the smell of home for me. Whenever someone visits from there, I always ask for mote chawal and makke ka aata. It is what I grew up on." "People are not bad anywhere," she said quietly. "It is situations, shaped by politics, that push them away from each other." Her home is here now. Yet it is also there, where her family still lives, in the folds of mountains I have only known through stories. And perhaps that is the truth about home—it can live in more than one place, and sometimes, painfully, in the spaces between them.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store