Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Living on hacked Wi-Fi as phones have no net

Pakistan PM Sharif appoints 22 MPs as special envoys to ‘fight Kashmir cause’

- Abhishek Saha ■ abhishek.saha@hindustant­imes.com

The Valley has been without mobile internet for 50 days now. But that hasn’t bothered its resourcefu­l young residents who have learnt to hack into Wi-Fi connection­s of banks, hotels, and even private residences to stay connected to the web.

“Necessity is the mother of invention. Without internet we can’t watch any films, play games, or listen to new songs. So we have figured out this hacking,” says a Class 10 student while his friends help this reporter hack into a network using an app called WPS WPA Tester on Google Play.

“This app allows you to hack into comparativ­ely weaker Wi-fi connection­s. It’s easy,” a Class 7 student says.

The app can be copied via file-sharing software and has become popular among college students and office-goers as well.

Not everyone, however, is happy with the ‘ad-hoc measures’. “Youngsters — even girls at times — park their two-wheelers near our house, hack into our Wi-Fi and surf the internet on their phones,” complains a woman resident of Lal Bazaar area.

Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif on Saturday appointed 22 parliament­arians as special envoys “for fighting the Kashmir cause in different parts of the world”.

“I am standing behind these special envoys to ensure their toil for highlighti­ng the Kashmir cause resonates across the world so that I can shake the collective conscience of the internatio­nal community during my address at the UN this September,” Sharif said in a statement.

The move marks an escalation in Pakistan’s ongoing row with India over the unrest in Kashmir following the killing of militant commander Burhan Wani.

Sharif said Pakistan will remind the United Nations of its long-held promise of “right selfdeterm­ination for the Kashmiri people” and would make it clear to India that it was them that had approached the inter-government­al organisati­on several decades ago on Kashmir dispute, but are not fulfilling its promise.

“Generation after generation of Kashmiris have seen only broken pledges and ruthless oppression,” the prime minister added in his statement. Sharif added, “The Kashmir dispute is the most persistent failure of the United Nations; the UN must establish its relevance. We cannot relent from the Kashmir cause by any stretch of imaginatio­n.”

The parliament­arians who have been nominated to lobby for the Kashmir cause in various countries include Ejazul Haq, the son of former military strongman Ziaul Haq. The prime minister also nominated Maulana Fazlur Rehman, who heads his faction of the Jamat-ulem Islam (JUI) party, a right wing party.

His remarks came on the 50th day of violent protests in Kashmir. India has accused Pakistan of inciting violence in Kashmir and supporting cross-border terrorism.

 ?? WASEEM ANDRABI/ HT ?? Youngsters surf the internet on their phones after hacking into a Wi-fi network in Srinagar as mobile internet remains suspended in the conflict-hit Kashmir.
WASEEM ANDRABI/ HT Youngsters surf the internet on their phones after hacking into a Wi-fi network in Srinagar as mobile internet remains suspended in the conflict-hit Kashmir.

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