Witnessing human terror since ages, the valley is under the threat of floods due to a week long incessant rain which is affecting the rescue operations as well.
The Prime Minister of India Narendra Modi on Sunday declared the situation a "national-level disaster", and announced a special assistance of Rs 1,000 crores for the flood-hit state, from PM's relief fund.
River Jhelum flowing 14 feet above the danger mark. Homes, military bases and hospitals inundated in the region's main city Srinagar as the Jhelum river overflowed its banks.
Landslides triggered by heavy rainfall have damaged roads, dozens of bridges, buildings and crops. Land route has been stopped on the Jammu-Pathankot highway. The state government has closed all schools till September 7.
Some 2,500 villages have been partially or completely submerged across the area, while thousands of people are stranded on rooftops waiting to be rescued. A temple being washed away by the force of the flood.
While the National Disaster Response Force teams have evacuated over 2700 victims to safer places, the Indian Air Force has also mounted massive relief efforts.
Flood waters rose sharply overnight in Srinagar, a city of 900,000, catching many people living in low-lying areas unaware. This picture speaks volume about the prevailing flood conditions in the valley.
The Prime Minister of India Narendra Modi taking an aerial survey of the flood affected region in the valley.
Five days of incessant rains in Jammu and Kashmir have left at least 170 people dead in the region's worst flooding in more than six decades.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday declared the situation a "national-level disaster" and announced a special assistance of Rs 1,000 crores for the flood-hit state besides Rs 2 lakhs compensation from