With virtually no business having been transacted for 50 days, small-scale entrepreneurs and apple traders have stated they were desperately hoping for an end to the clampdown in the Kashmir Valley and are unable to cope with threats from terror groups.
The Valley, which was brought under a virtual curfew with communication networks snapped on August 5, has seen little difference in the last seven weeks as public transport is still not available and schools waiting for students to collect assignments.
The apple trade, which is the lifeline of a majority of people in North Kashmir’s Sopore and three districts of South Kashmir, has taken a hit. There is a shortfall of 30,000 tonnes till September. The figures till mid-September in 2018 was 80,000 tonnes and this year, it is a little less than 50,000 tonnes, the officials said. The reasons: Threats by terror groups, beating of orchard owners and burning down of trucks ferrying the fruit outside the Valley.