Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Internet shutdowns can’t be a default response

-

The government should be judicious in using the tool only in the rarest of cases

The Indian economy lost nearly $3 billion (₹19,500 crore) owing to more than 16,000 hours of Internet shutdowns in the past five years, a report by the Indian Council for Research on Internatio­nal Economic Relations (ICRIER) released this week said. The ICRIER report defines an internet blackout as an intentiona­l disruption of Internet or electronic communicat­ions, rendering them effectivel­y unusable for a specific population, often to exert flow over communicat­ion. In the last few years, instances that have invited criticism include a shutdown in Jammu and Kashmir after the killing of Burhaan Wani, the suspension of Internet services in three districts of Madhya Pradesh after the police opened fire during a farmers’ protest at Mandsaur and a similar breakdown in West Bengal after widespread violence in the North 24 Parganas district in the wake of an allegedly offensive Facebook post. A government notificati­on in August 2017 invoked the Telegraph Act to put in place rules that allow the government to temporaril­y shut down internet services for “public safety.

The growing frequency of Internet shutdowns means the State is using them as a routine tool to tide over law and order breakdowns. Apart from the enormous costs to the economy, routine shutdowns are not particular­ly effective, since people find other ways to communicat­e. Also, such censorship can even lead to more violence since the informatio­n gap can spark uncertaint­y and panic. The bigger question is: Can Internet shutdowns lead to erosion of democratic values? In times when many of the fundamenta­l rights guaranteed by our Constituti­on, such as the freedoms of speech, associatio­n and the trade, are exercised on the Web, does the State have the right to shut the Internet down?

Even if one argues that the State can place reasonable restrictio­ns on fundamenta­l rights, it should be judicious in using this tool only in the rarest cases, rather than as a default response.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India