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‘No Assessment Made’ on Impact of Pahalgam Attack on Locals Dependent on Tourism: Govt

Union tourism minister Gajendra Shekhawat was answering a question posed in the Lok Sabha.
The Wire Staff
Jul 28 2025
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Union tourism minister Gajendra Shekhawat was answering a question posed in the Lok Sabha.
The main market of Pahalgam wears a deserted look after the attack in the Baisaran valley. Photo: Jehangir Ali.
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New Delhi: The Union tourism ministry has not assessed the economic impact of the Pahalgam terror attack on locals dependent on the tourism industry, minister Gajendra Shekhawat said in parliament.

In an unstarred question, Lok Sabha MP Asaduddin Owaisi asked whether the government is aware of the decline in tourist visits and the subsequent losses suffered in Jammu and Kashmir following the terrorist attack, which he noted occurred during peak tourist season.

To this, Shekhawat on Monday (July 28) tabled the number of domestic and foreign tourists the Jammu and Kashmir tourism department recorded in the Union territory from 2020 to 2024 as well as between January and June this year.

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Asked if the government had prepared an assessment on the attack's “economic impact on local tourism-dependent stakeholders”, Shekhawat answered in the negative.

“No such assessment has been made by the Ministry of Tourism on economic impact on local tourism-dependent stakeholders in Jammu and Kashmir,” he wrote.

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Owaisi also asked for details of specific measures the government has taken to “restore tourist confidence and promote tourism in the region” following the April 22 attack.

While Shekhawat listed various official tourism-related initiatives applying across the country, including to Jammu and Kashmir, he did not characterise any steps as having been undertaken specifically in light of the terrorist attack.

Terrorists singled out and killed 25 tourists – one of them a Nepali national – in the Baisaran meadow near south Kashmir's Pahalgam on April 22, sparking an exodus of tourists from the resort town during peak visiting season. They also killed a local man who offered pony rides to tourists.

India blamed Pakistan for the attack and launched its ‘Operation Sindoor’ against nine sites identified as terrorist infrastructure in Pakistan as well as Pakistan-occupied Jammu and Kashmir on May 7, sparking a four-day-long military conflict that ended with a ceasefire and numerous casualties on both sides.

According to the data tabled by Shekhawat, 96,12,234 tourists – 95,92,664 of them from India and 19,570 from abroad – visited Jammu and Kashmir in the first six months of this year. In all of the previous year 2,35,90,081 tourists visited the Union territory.

Data obtained via RTI has also suggested that only 10% of the purported tourist footfall in the territory since Article 370 was read down in 2019 went to the Kashmir valley.

The activist who obtained the data has however claimed that the number of tourists going to the valley may have been inflated by poor methodology.

This article went live on July twenty-eighth, two thousand twenty five, at forty-nine minutes past nine at night.

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