The government’s announcement of a Detailed Project Report for repair and renovation of migrant camps in Jammu, with a cost estimate of over Rs 82 crore, is a significant step in acknowledging the long-standing needs of displaced families. For Kashmiri Pandits and other migrants who left the Valley during the exodus, these camps and transit accommodations have been their reality for more than three decades. What was meant to be temporary relief has become a prolonged arrangement, and the condition of many facilities has deteriorated over time. The move to seek financial concurrence and ensure budgetary provisioning under the CAPEX plan shows that the administration is attempting to address these concerns in a structured way.
The camps in Jammu and transit accommodations in the Valley are not just shelters; they are spaces where families have tried to rebuild lives despite limited resources. Over the years, migrants have faced challenges of overcrowding, poor sanitation and inadequate maintenance. The proposal to transfer upkeep responsibilities to the Public Works Department is a practical measure, given the limited engineering capacity of the Relief Organisation. This shift could help ensure more consistent maintenance and better infrastructure support. It also reflects an effort to institutionalize the upkeep of these facilities rather than leaving them to ad hoc arrangements.
Kashmiri Pandit exodus remains one of the most difficult chapters in the Valley’s history. Families fled their homes overnight, leaving behind livelihoods and heritage. Camps and transit accommodations were meant to be temporary solutions, but they have become semi-permanent fixtures. Migrants have lived with uncertainty about return, livelihood and recognition. Their grievances are not only about infrastructure but also about the larger question of dignity and belonging. The government’s latest plan, therefore, carries weight not just as a financial exercise but as a signal that the needs of displaced communities are being taken seriously.
The debates in the Assembly, where legislators raised issues of daily wagers and Talwara migrants alongside the concerns of Kashmiri migrants, highlight how displacement intersects with economic insecurity. Migrants often face irregular employment and limited opportunities, compounding the difficulties of exile. Their voices are sometimes lost in political exchanges, but the fact that these issues are being raised in the House shows that they remain part of the public agenda. Addressing them requires both immediate measures for better living conditions and long-term strategies for rehabilitation.
Repairing and renovating camps is necessary, but it should be seen as part of a broader framework. Migrants need assurances of safety, livelihood opportunities, and pathways to reintegration. Transit accommodations must be maintained, but they should not become permanent settlements. The government’s responsibility is to balance immediate improvements with long-term planning, ensuring that displaced families can look beyond survival toward stability and restoration. This requires consistent policy, adequate funding, and timely execution.
The latest proposal is a step in the right direction. It acknowledges the recurring nature of upkeep and seeks to institutionalize maintenance through budgetary provisions. At the same time, it must be followed by visible action on the ground. Migrants deserve clarity and consistency, not just promises. A balanced approach is needed; repairing existing facilities while also working toward sustainable rehabilitation. The government’s task now is to translate this DPR into tangible progress, ensuring that displaced families see improvements in their daily lives while keeping the larger goal of reintegration in focus. This would not only address immediate grievances but also help restore confidence among communities that have waited far too long for resolution.
