HomeNewsJammu and KashmirPahalgam terror attack comes at a time of mega infra push in J&K, from hospitals to highways

Pahalgam terror attack comes at a time of mega infra push in J&K, from hospitals to highways

The Union Territory has seen investments grow from Rs 841 crore in 2017-18 to Rs 76,000 crore worth of infrastructure projects underway. J&K is building roads and highways at breakneck speed.

April 23, 2025 / 15:05 IST
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The Pahalgam terror attack has damaged Jammu & Kashmir’s tourism prospects, a mainstay of the economy that had just started looking up, given the momentum in economic development, driven by infrastructure development and business-friendly initiatives.
The Pahalgam terror attack has damaged Jammu & Kashmir’s tourism prospects, a mainstay of the economy that had just started looking up, given the momentum in economic development, driven by infrastructure development and business-friendly initiatives.

The terror attack in Pahalgam has come at a time when Jammu and Kashmir has seen a concerted push in the last few years to attract investment for development and enable greater connectivity within the Union Territory, with some of India’s most ambitious projects in the works to bridge the infrastructure deficit.

During the last five years, 40 infrastructure projects have been announced in critical areas of highways and railways, with an aim to increase year-round connectivity. In fact, Prime Minister Modi was to visit Srinagar on April 19 to flag off the Vande Bharat Express from Katra to Srinagar, which was postponed due to bad weather. Currently, time taken to travel from Katra - the base town of the revered Vaishno Devi shrine - to Srinagar takes around 6-7 hours by road, which will soon be cut down to just three hours by the Vande Bharat Express.

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The Centre is executing 51 mega projects in Jammu & Kashmir, initially estimated at Rs 76,000 crore, the costs of which have risen by 56 percent to Rs 1.16 trillion due to delays, according to the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI).

In January this year, PM Modi in a public address in Srinagar had talked about Jammu and Kashmir’s transformation into a hub of infrastructure development, highlighting an array of ongoing projects. “Our Jammu and Kashmir is becoming a hub of tunnels, bridges, and ropeways. Effects of an atmosphere of peace in Jammu and Kashmir are visible with thriving tourism. Kashmir is writing a new saga of development today,” Modi said on January 13 at the inauguration of the Sonamarg tunnel, built to improve connectivity to the tourist hub.