Indians hoard food, cancel trips amid escalating armed conflict

Indians hoard food, cancel trips amid escalating armed conflict

Panic buying sets in as both nations claim to have shot down each other's drones and missiles recently.

Kashmiri villagers evacuate Gingal village in Uri district, fleeing overnight shelling from Pakistan in Indian-controlled Kashmir. (AP pic)
AMRITSAR:
Many Indians, especially those living in areas closer to the Pakistan border, have started hoarding essentials and cancelling travel plans amid a rapid escalation in military conflict between the two nuclear-armed nations.

Citizens across towns in Punjab in India, such as Pathankot, Amritsar and Chandigarh, are seeing such panic buying of groceries, medicines and gasoline.

Gagandeep Madan, a 42-year-old who owns a ‘kirana’ shop — a mom-and-pop store — about nine miles short of the Attari-Wagah border near Amritsar in Punjab, said almost all shops in the area, including his, had run out of food essentials on Wednesday.

“Customers came and bought about one month’s worth of wheat, rice, sugar and pulses,” Madan said. “Panic set in among everyone here. Everyone wanted to be prepared.”

India said it “neutralised” Pakistani drone and missile attacks targeting several military sites on Thursday night, marking a second day of hostilities between the neighbours. India began the military strikes on Wednesday on what it called terrorist targets in Pakistan in retaliation for an April 22 attack that killed 26 civilians in the India-controlled part of Kashmir region.

With both nations saying they have shot down drones and missiles from the other in the past few days, local media reports say tourist hotspots are seeing dwindling footfalls. India has shut down more than two dozen airports in northern and western parts of the country.

Panic buying

Some residents in Amritsar, which saw a blackout last night, stored water in large containers fearing power outages would mean they can’t use their electric pumps to draw ground water.

In Pathankot, Ashish Kumar has been seeing a run on food products and snacks at his tiny kirana for the past few days.

The local administration of Chandigarh, the capital of the northern states of Punjab and Haryana, said in a post on X on Friday that individuals and businesses were prohibited from hoarding essential commodities, medicines and fuel.

In certain parts of the country, rumours are spreading, causing people to rush to collect essential food items and other daily necessities.

State refiner Indian Oil Corp also sought to allay fears by saying it has ample stock of fuels and discouraged stockpiling.

“Our supply lines are running smoothly,” it said in an X post. “There is no need for panic buying — fuel and LPG is readily available at all our outlets. Help us serve you better by staying calm and avoiding unnecessary rush.”

A 31-year-old photographer said that her neighbourhood in Chandigarh was in pin-drop silence on Thursday night after a blackout. She didn’t want to be identified, citing privacy reasons.

People rebasing

She said her family had packed their clothes and essentials and were planning to relocate to their house in Gurugram, a satellite city to Delhi, for the next two to three weeks. A PTI report on Saturday said many people in border villages in Punjab were moving to safer areas.

The Indian Premier League, or IPL, the world’s most lucrative cricket tournament which was set to conclude on May 25, has now been suspended for at least a week. The new schedule will be announced after assessing the situation, the sport’s governing body in India said in a statement Friday.

An IPL match going on in the Himalayan city of Dharamshala on Thursday night was discontinued after reports of drone attacks in nearby cities.

A hotel in the nearby hill station of Dalhousie had to provide accommodation and transport to about 100 stranded guests who were visiting for the cricket matches, its 29-year-old owner Siddharth Bakaria told Bloomberg News. His chain GoHolidays.in is expecting a drop in visitors to northern parts of the country.

Pakistan has also moved the remaining matches of its Pakistan Super League to the UAE for security reasons, Pakistan Cricket Board said in a statement.

The ongoing strife has also led to multiple events being postponed across Pakistan. The EU Pakistan Business Forum in Islamabad, an investment summit in Lahore and Australia Day in Karachi, all have been canceled or delayed.

Karachi’s streets were quiet with a drop in road traffic. One upscale Chinese restaurant hardly had any customers on Thursday night with the only television switched to a news channel.

Although Pakistan is not seeing a similar panic buying, sales of torch lights and batteries have gone up in the last couple of days, according to Jarrar Shah, founder of 24SEVEN that helps kirana stores go digital.

Instagram advice

Instagram users in India have started making and circulating videos online, advising the medicines that citizens should stock in case things worsen and instructing how to turn on government alerts on mobile phones in case of emergencies.

Some are giving financial advice, which include keeping cash that could last a few days and spreading funds across different banks to be safe.

“Right now, travellers should reconsider non-essential travel to certain domestic regions like Kashmir, parts of Jammu, Leh, and Amritsar,” Karan Agarwal, director at travel agency Cox & Kings said in a statement. “These areas are often the first to experience disruptions, both operational and security-related, when tensions escalate.”

Interglobe Aviation Ltd, which operates as IndiGo, has cancelled its flights to affected cities of Srinagar, Jammu, Amritsar, Leh, Chandigarh, Dharamshala, Bikaner, Jodhpur, Kishangarh and Rajkot, it said in an advisory Friday.

IndiGo’s shares declined for the fourth straight trading session in Mumbai, losing almost 8% since Monday’s close. Shares of Indian Hotels Co — that operates the Taj brand of five-star hotels — have slipped a little over 10% over this period.

Schools in Punjab are shut for the coming three days, the education minister of Punjab said in an X post on Thursday.

Meenakshi Chauhan, a 38-year-old Amritsar-based mother of two, has already begun planning her evening routine around the city’s blackout timings. “As everyone says, hope for the best but prepare for the worst,” Chauhan said.

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