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HAMID, PEERZADA ARSHAD (4) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   088329


Connecting Ladakh / Hamid, Peerzada Arshad   Journal Article
Hamid, Peerzada Arshad Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract Due to its proximity to the long-contested Indo-Chinese frontier, Ladakh would seem to be of significant strategic importance for India. Yet for all the pledges and proposals made by Indian lawmakers over the years to build infrastructure of the area, it is only recently that New Delhi has finally started to inch towards fulfilling these promises. As is perhaps to be assumed, it has been military motives that have finally led policymakers to begin putting real money behind their promises. But with new roads and what appears to be an incredibly ambitious railway project - the first of its kind - now on the anvil promising to connect Ladakh to the rest of India, it is Ladakhis themselves who could well benefit the most. The first signs of movement came last year when, after more than four decades of closure, the Indian Air Force revived two old airbases in the eastern part of Ladakh. These bases were certainly well-situated from a military perspective - Daulat Beg Oldi and Fukche are, respectively, just eight and two-and-a-half kilometres south of the Line of Actual Control - and thus offer an understandable first step in re-opening the region. In recent weeks, reconstruction work has also begun on the Neoma base, slightly farther inland, which will likely be operational by the end of the year. (The Air Force is also planning to reopen the Chushul airfield, in the same area, in the near future.) All three bases were built to facilitate troop movement in the run-up to the 1962 war between India and China, but were abandoned by the Indian Army in 1966, after an earthquake damaged the airstrips.
Key Words Connecting Ladakh 
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2
ID:   109662


J & K vs New Delhi / Hamid, Peerzada Arshad   Journal Article
Hamid, Peerzada Arshad Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Key Words India  Kashmir  Indus Water Treaty  Jammu  New Delhi  Pakistan - 1967-1977 
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3
ID:   086746


Palaces on sewage / Hamid, Peerzada Arshad   Journal Article
Hamid, Peerzada Arshad Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract For many a tourist for many a decade, staying in a houseboat has been the highlight of a visit to Kashmir. Floating on the serene waters of the Dal and Nagin lakes in the Valley, with picturesque mountains forming the backdrop, houseboats have been hosting visitors, mostly from the West, since colonial times. But suddenly, this idyllic tradition has been threatened, and simply because nothing was done when there was time.
Key Words Kashmir  Pollution  House Boats  Lakes 
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4
ID:   126019


Silent fields: walking the unmarked graves of Jammu and Kashmir / Hamid, Peerzada Arshad   Journal Article
Hamid, Peerzada Arshad Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract Surankot is a small dusty frontier town of Poonch district in Jammu & Kashmir. A row of decrepit concrete constructions - the town's marketplace - stand face to face on the both sides of a narrow, potholed road. At the end of this line of shops, a bend in the road leads to the police station and an Indian Army cantonment. A stone's throw further is a graveyard containing unmarked graves, with bodies unknown to the resident
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