- In Jammu and Kashmir, taxi drivers say business is down by more than 80 percent compared with two years ago, while hotels are only getting a handful of guests
- Tensions soared between India and Pakistan in recent days as both sides launched said they launched air strikes
Migrant workers are fleeing India’s northern state of Jammu and Kashmir and tourist arrivals have fallen to a trickle amid
Hundreds of taxis stood idle at the main railway station of Jammu, the winter capital of the
“My wife is really scared and has been calling me back,” Brajesh Prasad, who works at a white limestone factory near Jammu, told Reuters outside the emergency ticket counter at the railway station, as he sought to catch a train back to his village in Uttar Pradesh state.
“I first came here two years
Prasad was leaving with a group of seven other men who worked together in Jammu and Kashmir.
At the adjoining taxi rank, taxi drivers’ union leader Ravinder Singh said March to September was usually the busiest season but this year prospects were looking grim.
He said taxi business was down by more than 80 percent compared with two years ago, as very few people were in town to visit the famous Hindu shrine of Vaishno Devi, 62km (38 miles) north of Jammu, which usually attracts millions of people every year.
“The situation is very bad for us
Outside Singh’s office, a group of three Hindu pilgrims from the western city of Pune waited for their husbands to return from the railway station with
Such truncated trips and a fall in the numbers of visitors are particularly bad for hotel chains, both local and international.
Ratandeep Singh,
But the President of Jammu’s Chamber of Commerce and Industries, Rakesh Gupta, said its members were willing to “lose business for the sake of the country”.
He said India rightly avenged the killing of 40 paramilitary police in the state on February 14 in a suicide attack claimed by a Pakistan-based Islamist militant group.
“Such tensions can never be good for any business but nation comes first,” he said.