The Free Press Journal

Centre, J&K hide orders on communicat­ion ban, scribe tells Apex court

- AGENCIES /

The Centre and the Jammu and Kashmir administra­tion have “suppressed” from the Supreme Court the relevant orders and notificati­ons related to communicat­ions shutdown and internet blockade in the valley, a senior journalist has alleged.

Executive Editor of Kashmir Times Anuradha Bhasin, who has filed a petition in the apex court on the restrictio­ns imposed by the authoritie­s following the abrogation of provisions of Article 370 on August 5, said this in her rejoinder affidavit.

The affidavit came in the public domain on Monday, the day when post-paid mobile service was restored in the Valley.

“The respondent two (J&K administra­tion) has suppressed relevant orders/ notificati­ons/ circulars/ directions/documents which are essential for proper adjudicati­on of the present writ petition and require judicial scrutiny for determinin­g its constituti­onality,” Bhasin said in her counter affidavit.

She said the Centre has also suppressed such orders and not placed them before the court.

“The respondent nos. 1 and 2 (Centre and J&K) have not placed any such orders before this court and suppressed the said orders in its affidavit,” it said.

They have filed “evasive pleadings, to avoid a determinat­ion on the constituti­onality of the relevant orders, while emphasizin­g situations of the past rather than the present,” the counter affidavit said.

Bhasin has further stated that she and her staffers were able to print a “truncated version” of the newspaper from Srinagar on October 11 but only about 500 copies could be printed due to operationa­l roadblocks created by the communicat­ion shutdown.

She had earlier told the top court that even over a month after the scrapping of provisions of Article 370, journalist­s were “not allowed to move freely in the state”.

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