As of now, the valley’s economy is dominated by agriculture. More than 75 per cent of the population has a rural background, directly dependent on farming. Landless farmers are also an important category. These ‘gujjars’ traditionally keep animals like buffaloes and cows for livelihood. Women play an important — but often overlooked — role in agriculture when it comes to growing food and animal husbandry. Out of the total population of two million people, the livelihood patterns of 1.5 million are dependent on direct farm or farm-related livelihoods. The land normally under cultivation is about 0.1 million hectares, out of which about 50 per cent is rain-fed.
The farming system in Swat is certainly a model for the rest of Pakistan as it boasts of a blend of both the traditional and non-traditional cropping patterns — in fruits, cereals, vegetables, non-timber forest products, medicinal herbs, honey, silk, nursery production and so on. It emerged, in a short span of time, as the hub of a variety of fruit growing orchards, off-season vegetables and cereal crops with excellent production, value addition and supply chains.
Maize grain cultivated in Swat has an edge in market in Pakistan because of its quality and flavour. Swati rice is also renowned for quality. Market players, industrialists, transporters and multinational firms have established their effective networks in the valley and earn millions of rupees in each fruit season. It attracts skilled workers of down districts and Punjab to work in the fruit growing areas of Swat. It employs 56 per cent of the local labour force throughout the year.
Until recently, Swat was a centre of soybean cultivation and the preferred choice of the orchard farmers till the government removed subsidies and its production dropped. This multi-utility crop has many positive benefits. Soybean seeds from Upper Swat were exported for plantation in other parts of the country.
Honey from Swat is a famous product across the globe for its unique flavour. Its distinctiveness has ranked it higher both in price and demand. Farmer delegations from across the country once visited Swat to learn the agricultural practices here. Similarly, many experts from the globe worked here and appreciated the role of the local farmers in the development of agriculture and its by-products.
Swat is the food reservoir not only for the two million people that comprise its populace, but also for billions of other living species including diverse plants, wildlife, birds, bees and micro-organisms. Rare and precious natural resources are now under severe threat, owing to unsustainable development. Fertile green land is being converted into roads, homes, townships schemes and so on.
The above facts reveal that such precious but limited resources require proper land use planning. It not only benefits the locals, but also the whole country. Forests and mountains in Swat play a role as water reservoirs for downstream districts. Irrigation of the Pakistani plains depends upon the Swat River, which gets replenished by the yearly snow on hilltops.
Proposed military cantonments in fertile lands of Kabal, Khwaza Khela and Barikot will most likely irreversibly impact this traditional food basket, which not only sustains the livelihoods of the local population but also contributes to the food security of the rest of the country and earns huge foreign exchange for the national exchequer.
Building cantonments threaten to convert the traditional ‘green growth’ into ‘brown growth’, considering its long-term negative impact on ecology and economy. This kind of a model needs to be challenged by environmental and agriculture experts and policymakers.
Published in The Express Tribune, May 1st, 2014.
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COMMENTS (12)
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The article is very good in the sense that it draw the attention of all to a potential problem, related to the loss of fertile land to construction. Construction and proposed constructions has already been snatching fertile land and beautiful country side all over the country, especially along the motorway in KP where dozens of Housing societies have already delineated a big chunk of the green countryside that would be lost in a very short span of time. the beauty that we see now all along the M1 shall vanish and our children may not even know as to what was there? Same is case with Swat. This is high time to see if a re-designing can help save the major chunk of the fruit basket in Swat and thus save families, dependent on such lands?
Your work is great Sir. I look forward to hear from you such informative article.
Wonderful write up !!! We salute courage and devotion of these two true defenders of green and benevolent Pakistan .
We hope that Army top brass and governments of Pakistan and kpk will honour points raised by these expert environmentalists and build cantonments on waste and less fertile land of the heavenly valley of Swat.
common sense happens to be the most "uncommon" commodity - in pakistan!
@Ajamal:
why not a "social" security state for inclusive development rather than the privileged "few and mighty"? why factor in jews and western"enemies" when we happen to be our worst enemies. read history!!!
well these concerns are not misplaced at all and the govt must act to address these issues , also local people have continuously complained of low and sub market rates for their lands by the army , but how the army can afford to ignore swat valley when it is present in every major city of the country and a major market forces as far as property real estate are concerned
I think cantonment for Swat is the best idea.Pak-Army is good and fast at building things, a motorway to Swat will be most likely on cards, if Army needs one, thus making Swat more accessible to tourist and swat's products more easy to transport to rest of pakistan.
If other cantonments are anything to go by on, like Abbottabad and pindi cantonment, then prices of land will rise in the surrounding area of cantonment making locals more rich and with thousands of soldiers coming from all over pakistan on regular basis for training and duly swat's local business will prosper...
Can be a factor in CO2 (carbon dioxide) atmospheric concentration, and is thus a contributor to climate change
As Pakistan is a security state, it needs cantonments every where to defend itself. US, India, Israel and rest of the world have conspired against Pakistan.
Hard to see why a new cantonment cannot be built on less fertile land.