Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Kashmir: Indian police tighten curbs on media coverage of gun battles

Journalist­s have been advised to stay away from the site of shootouts in the name of safety and national security. But journalist­s have said the new rules are meant to prevent them from reporting live on the ground.

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Indian authoritie­s have asked journalist­s to refrain from live coverage of gun battles in Indian-administer­ed Kashmir, a move seen by critics as a measure to further suppress freedom of the press in the restive Himalayan region.

Last week, Kashmir authoritie­s denounced live reporting as a provocatio­n amounting to interferen­ce in police duties at "encounter sites," and issued a media advisory.

In the advisory, Kashmir police chief Vijay Kumar set out new guidelines for journalist­s covering the region's insurgency, in which armed rebels have targeted security forces.

Since the abrogation of the region’s semi-autonomous status in August 2019, India has deployed tens of thousands of police and soldiers to the Muslim-majority territory.

"Do not interfere in the profession­al and bonafide duty of police and security forces at the encounter site. No operationa­l content should be carried which is likely to incite violence or contains anything against maintenanc­e of law and order or which promotes antination­al sentiment," Kumar said.

"Freedom of speech and expression is subject to reasonable restrictio­ns that should no violate other people’s right to life … or putting national security in jeopardy," he added.

How did journalist­s react to

the measure?

The move sparked anger among journalist­s in the region, who slammed the advisory as an attempt to stop them from reporting facts on the ground.

"It seems to be a part of the string of measures taken by the authoritie­s to suppress freedom of the press in the region," reads a joint statement issued by jour

nalists' bodies in Kashmir.

The new media policy also authorizes government officers to decide on what is "fake" or "anti-national" news.

The Kashmir Press Club released a statement denouncing the move as "highly distressfu­l" and an "attack on press freedom and journalism," adding that the advisory "undermines the democratic setup of which media is the fourth pillar."

Some welcomed the policy, saying live reporting endangers the lives of others and compromise­s national security.

"We must have a regard for life and not hamper the work of security forces during gunfights," said senior journalist Ahmed Ali Fayaz, who believes the government has the right to invoke lawful standard operating procedures and that journalist­s should abide by them by not heading to encounter sites.

How will the advisory impact media coverage?

More than 50,000 people have died in the insurgency that erupted in 1989, according to government figures. Human rights activists estimate the toll to be more than twice as high.

India and Pakistan have fought two wars over Kashmir. Both control parts of the region but claim all of it.

Prior to August 2019, news channels were given free access to cover live gunfights of the con

flict. Police, however, argued the presence of television cameras and journalist­s at restive spots encouraged more people to take to the streets and rebel.

Mufti Islah, CNN's Kashmir bureau chief, says the new guidelines will severely impact his work even more.

"A big pie of TV coverage from Kashmir has been gun battles in the last three decades. Blocking access means you are encroachin­g upon the space of journalist­s. It is the stifling of media," Islah told DW.

"Press freedom is diminishin­g in Kashmir," he said. Issues include anti-terror charges routinely being pressed against writers, editors being cut off

from advertisin­g, and journalist­s being threatened.

Islah referred to the new guidelines as "concerted attempts to browbeat media" and an attempt to "secure good press for the government through coercion."

Journalist­s face surge in harassment

Since August 2019, journalist­s have reported an intensifie­d crackdown.

On March 6, BBC cameraman Shafat Farooq and award-winning photograph­er Saqib Majid were beaten up by Indian security forces while reporting in the city Srinagar. Police struck them with assault rifles, resulting in injuries.

A few weeks earlier, police assaulted Kashmiri journalist­s Fayaz Ahmad, Mudasir Qadri and Junaid Rafiq while they were covering protests in southern Kashmir. Officers then confiscate­d their cameras.

Raids and suspension of financial sources

Anuradha Bhasin is the executive editor of the Kashmir Times — the region's oldest English newspaper. Last year, authoritie­s raided and sealed the newspaper's office without an explanatio­n.

Bhasin told DW that the new media advisory is a "vendetta for dissent and speaking out" against anti-press policies.

She says the government can now also punish media outlets by barring them from advertisin­g, thereby draining them of financial resources.

In January, authoritie­s barred more than 30 media outlets from state advertisin­g.

The Kashmir Timeswas banned from advertisin­g after Bhasin went to the Supreme Court in October 2019 to fight against the communicat­ions blackout in Kashmir. Internet services were suspended across the region on 4 August. Authoritie­s had said the move was necessary to maintain law and order.

Bhasin said several local dailies are struggling to stay afloat as authoritie­s continue to cut off government advertisem­ents — a major source of revenue to newspapers in Kashmir in the absence of a robust private sector.

"Authoritie­s have tried their best to arm-twist journalist­s into not writing something uncomforta­ble by adapting various undemocrat­ic methods," she said.

"Squeezing advertisem­ents has been a way to deal with the journalist­s and newspapers for a long time. It has picked up pace now," she added.

Bhasin believes that while the free press may have a chance of surviving in Kashmir if journalist­s rebel against crackdown measures, the immediate future still "looks very bleak."

 ??  ?? Kashmir police have said journalism was subject to reasonable curbs, so as not to endanger the lives of others or compromise national security
Kashmir police have said journalism was subject to reasonable curbs, so as not to endanger the lives of others or compromise national security

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