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Jammu And Kashmir News Updated Jun 18, 2026

Omar Abdullah Promises Aid to Shopkeepers at J&K Lavender Festival

Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Omar Abdullah attended the lavender festival in Ganderbal district, promising a rehabilitation package for shopkeepers affected by a road-widening project. He highlighted lavender cultivation as a profitable venture for youth entrepreneurship and income generation. The event, under the "Lavender goes Global" theme, showcased the region's potential for floriculture and agri-tourism. Lavender farming, part of the Purple Revolution, has transformed rural livelihoods in areas like Doda and Anantnag.

CM Omar Abdullah attends lavender festival, promises aid to shopkeepers due to road widening in J&K's Ganderbal

Srinagar, June 18

Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Omar Abdullah on Thursday attended the lavender festival in Ganderbal district where he promised a rehabilitation package to shopkeepers and traders who lost their business places due to the road widening project in the district.

Omar Abdullah is also the sitting MLA in the 90-member Jammu and Kashmir Legislative Assembly from Ganderbal constituency.

He was addressing farmers and traders at the inauguration of a lavender festival in Nunar area of Ganderbal.

While addressing farmers and traders, the Chief Minister announced that the Union Territory government is preparing a rehabilitation package for shopkeepers affected by the road-widening project in Ganderbal and assured locals that local irrigation issues will be resolved promptly.

Chief Minister Omar Abdullah attended the Lavender Festival at the Agriculture Farm in Ganderbal's Nunar as the chief guest.

The event showcased the region's immense potential for floriculture, value-added agriculture, and agri-tourism.

Omar Abdullah highlighted that lavender cultivation has become a highly profitable avenue for youth entrepreneurship and income generation.

The exhibition focused on expanding the impact of aromatic crops, aligning with the "Lavender goes Global" theme.

Lavender cultivation in Jammu and Kashmir, famously known as the Purple Revolution, is a thriving agri-startup movement driven by the CSIR-IIIM Aroma Mission.

It has transformed thousands of rural livelihoods across regions like Doda, Anantnag, and the local area of Ganderbal by providing highly profitable, alternative crops.

The geographic and climatic conditions in the region are perfectly suited for lavender cultivation.

The crop needs cool, temperate summers and cold winters. Soil should be Well-drained, slightly acidic to neutral soils prevalent in the higher altitude regions.

It requires less water than traditional crops and is highly resistant to wildlife/monkey menace.

One kanal of land (about 1/8 of an acre) typically produces 80 kg to 90 kg of fresh lavender flowers.

Dried flowers generally sell for Rs 800 to Rs 1,000 per kg.

The flowers are distilled to extract high-value essential oils widely used in cosmetics, aromatherapy, and pharmaceuticals.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Priya S

This is what development should look like - supporting local farmers while also compensating those affected by infrastructure projects. The 80-90 kg per kanal yield at Rs 800-1000 per kg is impressive! But I'm concerned about the road widening impact - hope the shopkeepers get fair compensation, not peanuts.

James A

As someone who's followed the Purple Revolution from afar, it's amazing to see lavender cultivation spreading to Ganderbal. The theme "Lavender goes Global" is ambitious but achievable. However, promises of rehabilitation packages need to materialize quickly - shopkeepers can't wait forever while roads get widened.

Sneha F

It's heartening to see CM Omar Abdullah personally attending a lavender festival in his own constituency. This shows he's committed to local development. But he must ensure the irrigation issues are fixed pronto - farmers have waited long enough. The agri-tourism potential is huge if infrastructure supports it.

Michael C

A rehabilitation package for road widening victims? Finally some accountability. But let's see the fine print - will it cover lost livelihoods or just property loss? The lavender initiative is great, but don't use it to distract from the pain of displaced shopkeepers. We need transparency on both fronts.

Rohit L

Lavender cultivation is a brilliant alternative to traditional crops - less water, resistant to wildlife, and high returns. The Purple Revolution has transformed Doda and Anantnag; Ganderbal should benefit too. But CM sahab, please don't forget the small shopkeepers who are losing their businesses for road widening. They need real support, not vague promises.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Reader Voices

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