Kashmir’s first major snowfall of 2026, burying districts like, Shopian, Anantnag, and Baramulla under several feet of snow, revealed not beauty but breakdown. What should have been a season of wonder became a test of survival. The administration’s promises of readiness; stockpiled essentials, upgraded infrastructure, swift response; collapsed at the first storm.
Tourists lured by glossy packages of a “snow-clad paradise” found themselves trapped in Gulmarg hotels as roads remained blocked and electricity vanished. Families huddled under blankets; their vacations reduced to endurance. Locals in Tangmarg posted images of collapsed rooftops, snapped poles, and blocked roads. Social media became the Valley’s diary of despair, exposing the hollowness of official claims.
Srinagar-Jammu National Highway, Kashmir’s lifeline, remained shut for four days, stranding hundreds of vehicles. Drivers streamed live footage of endless jams, some abandoning cars to walk through snow. In Magam, a 45-minute drive to Gulmarg stretched into seven hours, worsened by inadequate clearance. Flight cancellations at Srinagar airport left travellers marooned. Villages across Anantnag and Sopore endured 72 hours without power, their homes frozen, and water pipes burst.
The government’s response was confined to advisories urging people to avoid travel. On the ground, machinery arrived late, roads remained blocked, and coordination failed. This was not an unforeseen calamity; the Western Disturbance had been forecast days in advance. Yet gusty winds toppled power lines in Srinagar. The administration was visible online but absent where it mattered: in villages, hospitals and highways.
The question is unavoidable: where was the government? Why were tourists left to light candles in ski resorts, and villagers forced to march through snow to reach their homes? Why did assurances collapse at the first test? Kashmir does not need rhetoric; it needs delivery.
Preparedness must mean resilient power grids, modern snowploughs, and rapid-response teams ready to act immediately. Roads to tourist destinations must prioritize local access alongside tourism. Emergency protocols for avalanches and blackouts must be strengthened so villages are not left in isolation.
Valley’s economy also depends on credibility. Tourism thrives not only on landscapes but on trust. When visitors leave with stories of survival instead of serenity, the damage extends beyond reputation; it strikes at livelihoods of hoteliers, guides, transporters, and artisans. Locals, too, lose faith when promises of readiness dissolve into silence. A winter that should have been celebrated as a gift of nature instead became one of the chapters of hardship.
This failure is not new; each year, the same cycle repeats: assurances of preparedness, followed by paralysis when winter arrives. What makes this winter different is the scale of exposure. Social media amplified every lapse, every blackout, every stranded tourist. The world saw Kashmir not as a paradise but as a place where governance faltered under predictable weather. That visibility should serve as a wake-up call.
Kashmir’s beauty is timeless, but beauty alone cannot sustain trust. Trust is built when governance delivers, when promises are kept, when people are not abandoned in darkness and cold.
If the administration truly wants Kashmir to be celebrated as a winter paradise, it must first prove capable of protecting its own people. Valley needs action, not slogans. It needs delivery, not promises. Until then, every snowfall will remain less a gift of nature than a reminder of governance that failed to show up.
