Leh:Unlike every other summer when the bazaars are teeming with tourists, this season, due to the coronavirus pandemic, life in Leh, is placid. Yet as the sharp sun shines on the rugged mountains of the high-altitude desert of Ladakh, natives step out wearing masks and hope. Reason -- Ladakh is happy with its union territory status.
On August 5 last year, the central government carved out two union territories -- Ladakh and Jammu & Kashmir (J&K), out of the state of J&K.
The union territory of Ladakh had been a long pending demand of the Ladakhi people. The agitation for the demand had begun under Ladakh's greatest leader Kushok Bakula, 65 years ago and later carried forward by another Ladakhi leader Thupstan Chhewang. Both represented Ladakh in the Indian Parliament.
"None of us had ever imagined that the demand would be met in our lifetime. In six decades no Prime Minister could do it when Prime Minister Narendra Modi last year, in his second tenure, made the announcement, we could not believe our ears," Tashi Norbu, a cab driver in Leh said.
Even as tourism "the sector on which a huge section of Ladakhis are dependent economically" been hit due to coronavirus pandemic, common people in markets which are partially closed, are brimming with hope. "Ladakh and Ladakhis are finally going to shape their own future and have their own identity, independent of Jammu & Kashmir," Stanzin, a seller of organic produce in Leh said.
Putting the constitutional change in perspective, the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of the Leh Autonomous Hill Development Council (LAHDC), Gyal P. Wangyal pointed out how Jammu and Kashmir state used to draw funds from the central government in the name of Ladakh's geographical area of 45,000 sq km, which was 65 per cent of J&K, but granted only two per cent of the allotted budget to Ladakh because the state government would distribute the resources on the basis of population.
Last year, the budget for Ladakh was Rs 57 crore. The budget today is four times of the last year's -- Rs 232 crore. Ladakh got Rs 6000 crore budget as a special development package.
"But unfortunately, COVID-19 pandemic happened which has set us behind by three years because we could not hold the meeting to approve the budget in the council," Wangyal who has been the CEO of LAHDC for the last one year, said.