PoK Crisis: How Travel Bans and Power Theft Fuel Growing Unrest

Authorities in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir are limiting civilian mobility by restricting passports and travel documents. This comes amid growing unemployment and a mental health crisis affecting the region's educated youth. Recent protests in Muzaffarabad turned deadly when security forces used violent measures against demonstrators. Meanwhile, local communities receive no benefits from major hydropower projects like Mangla Dam despite massive displacement and promises of compensation.

Key Points: PoK Authorities Restrict Mobility Jobs Spark Protests

  • Authorities restrict passports and travel permits citing security reasons to suppress dissent
  • Protests in Muzaffarabad left nine dead after police used violent force
  • Mangla Dam displaces 110,000 residents without promised compensation or free electricity
  • PoK residents pay 20-40 times more for electricity than Pakistani provinces
  • Mental health crisis and drug abuse surge amid unemployment and poverty
  • Natural resources including timber and minerals exploited without local benefits
3 min read

PoK authorities limiting civilians' mobility and employment opportunities: Report

Pakistan-occupied Kashmir faces travel restrictions, job shortages, and resource exploitation, triggering deadly protests and mental health crisis among residents.

"Local people were told they would receive 300 MW free of charge to meet their needs, but have received nothing - Amnesty International Report"

Islamabad, Oct 29

Authorities in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK) have curtailed civilians’ access to the traditional avenue of working abroad by imposing restrictions on obtaining passports, travel permits, and No Objection Certificates (NOC).

Citing “security reasons”, these restrictions are frequently used to suppress dissent and hinder travel by individuals with political or family links to activities considered sensitive by the authorities.

According to an Amnesty International report, lack of job opportunities at home, coupled with spiralling cost of living and rising poverty, has triggered a surge in mental health problems and drug abuse among a more educated and socially aware population in the region.

Recently, it said, protests erupted on the streets of Muzaffarabad where at least nine people were killed and dozens injured as young people once again took to the streets to voice long-festering frustrations.

The Pakistani authorities responded with a heavy hand, using violent force to disperse peaceful protests and shutting down communications to crush dissent.

Meanwhile, the report said, a longstanding concern is exploitation of the region’s natural resources by the Pakistani government, including timber from its extensive forests, minerals and major hydropower projects that benefit mainland Pakistan’s population rather than local residents.

This has resulted in the loss of productive farmland without any benefits to the local population, causing a sharp decline in income from farming activities, particularly the sale of apples, once a mainstay of the rural economy.

“One stark example is the Mangla Dam, a massive hydropower project built in 1967 on prime farmland and submerging 280 villages, including the towns of Mirpur and Dadyal. Over 110,000 residents were displaced. Pakistan promised the local population compensation in the form of royalties, free electricity, and even free water supply to Mirpur, but these promises were never fully honoured. With an installed capacity over 1,000 MW, Mangla produces abundant power, but almost all is fed into Pakistan’s national grid. Local people were told they would receive 300 MW free of charge to meet their needs, but have received nothing," the report stressed.

Instead, ironically, it said, residents of the region are required to purchase electricity at higher tariffs than those paid in Pakistan's provinces. Islamabad effectively treats power from the region as an "import” – charging locals 20-40 times more than the token rate it pays.

Unlike Pakistan’s provinces, PoK receives no hydropower royalty under Pakistan’s constitution, leaving the region without compensation for the dams located on its soil.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
The Mangla Dam story is particularly shocking. Displacing over 110,000 people and then not honoring compensation promises? And charging them 20-40 times more for electricity? This is economic exploitation at its worst. 😠
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Arjun K
While I agree Pakistan's treatment of PoK residents is terrible, I wish our media would also focus more on development issues in our own border regions. Both sides need attention and support.
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Sarah B
As someone who has worked in development, the mental health and drug abuse crisis mentioned here is a direct result of economic hopelessness. When educated youth have no opportunities, societies collapse. This needs urgent international attention.
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Vikram M
The apple farming decline hits close to home. My family is from Himachal and we know how important apple cultivation is for mountain economies. Destroying people's livelihoods while taking their resources is criminal.
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Michael C
The passport restrictions are clearly designed to prevent people from speaking out internationally. When you can't leave and can't protest, you're trapped. Basic human rights are being violated here.

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