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Sub-zero night temperature continues in Kashmir

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Srinagar: The minimum temperature settled below the freezing point in Kashmir as the weather stayed dry, even as the Meteorological Department has forecast rains and snow from the mid-week, officials said on Tuesday.

Srinagar recorded a low of minus 2.7 degrees Celsius on Monday night — down from minus 1.9 degrees Celsius the night before, they said. The minimum temperature was 0.6 degree below normal.

Qazigund, the gateway to the Valley, registered a minimum of minus 5.4 degrees Celsius – 2.1 degrees below the normal.

Kokernag in south Kashmir recorded a low of minus 5.2 degrees Celsius, while the minimum in Kupwara, a frontier district, settled at minus 4.3 degrees Celsius – 7.4 degrees below the normal, the officials said.

Pahalgam in Anantnag district registered a low of minus 11.8 degrees Celsius – down from minus 10.2 degrees Celsius. The minimum was 4.6 degrees below normal for this part of the season.

This was the lowest night temperature of the season so far at the tourist resort. The resort was also the coldest recorded place in Jammu and Kashmir.

The minimum temperature at the ski-resort of Gulmarg in Baramulla district went half a degree up from the previous night’s minus 12 degrees Celsius to settle at minus 11.5 degrees Celsius.

The meteorological office said the weather will remain mainly dry across J&K till January 18. There will be a further decrease in the night temperature till that time.

It said feeble western disturbances are likely to affect J&K from January 19 to 25.

The weather will remain cloudy from January 19-21 with chances of light rain or snow over isolated to scattered places mainly over higher reaches.

However, it said a much higher intensity precipitation will occur from the night of January 22 to the forenoon of January 24 and there is a possibility of widespread moderate snow in plains of Kashmir (with rains in Jammu) and moderate to heavy snow over middle and higher reaches.

Kashmir is currently under the grip of ‘Chillai Kalan’, the 40-day harshest weather period when the chances of snowfall are maximum and most frequent.

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