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Kashmir gagged: Newspaper presses raided, editors say staff held

Delnavaz B

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J&K govt says the curbs on newspapers, first of their kind, ‘reluctant’ decision to guard against ‘projections in media’.
FOR the first time in the Valley, printing presses were raided, printing machines stopped and their staff reportedly detained as the J&K government sought to enforce a complete information blockade. Apart from the extraordinary curbs on publication of newspapers, Internet and cellular communication has been almost completely snapped outside Srinagar.

By late evening, cable TV network was restored in some parts of Srinagar.

It is for the first time since 1990 that such a crackdown on the media is being seen in Kashmir.

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Asked about the “ban” on newspapers, J&K government spokesperson and Education Minister Nayeem Akhtar said it was a “reluctant decision”. “It is a temporary measure to address an extraordinary situation… In our opinion, there is an emotional lot, very young, out in the field, who get surcharged due to certain projections in the media, which results in multiplication of tragedies,” Akhtar told The Sunday Express.

On Friday night, police teams raided several newspaper printing presses in Srinagar and on its outskirts, stopped the printing, seized any published newspapers and, reportedly, detained press employees overnight.
Arshad Kaloo, Senior Editor of Greater Kashmir, the Valley’s leading English daily, said, “They (policemen) arrived at our printing press at around 1 am, when our men were printing newspapers. They stopped the (printing) machines and seized the papers that we had already published. They also arrested our four men and released them in the morning.”

Apart from Greater Kashmir, Urdu daily Kashmir Uzma, the Kashmir edition of Chandigarh-based Tribune, is printed at the press.

Raja Mohidin, the owner of K T Press, that publishes eight Srinagar-based newspapers, said a police team had raided their printing press at 2 am, seized all the newspapers there, taken away the printing plates and arrested eight press employees. The employees, Mohidin said, were released in the morning
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“We are not seeing this for the first time, but it is for the first time that they (the government) have officially banned newspapers from publishing. It is an attack on the freedom of the press,” said Rising Kashmir Editor-in-Chief Shujaat Bukhari. “We spoke to someone in the government and we were told that it will help (calm the situation)”.

Newspaper editors met in Srinagar on Saturday afternoon and termed the crackdown an “attack on the press”, “vowing to fight back at all costs”.

While it is not the first time newspapers have been forced to stop publication in Srinagar, it is the first time that this has been ensured officially.

In the early 1990s, Valley newspapers had suspended publication for a month after pressure from the government and militant organisations. In 2008, during the Amarnath land row agitation, the government had seized newspapers. In 2010, during the largescale protests by stonepelters, the government had cancelled all curfew passes issued to journalists, thus preventing publication of newspapers. While the government had later re-issued the limited curfew passes — two to each organisation — newspaper owners had suspended publication for 10 days in protest.

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Again, after the execution of Afzal Guru, the J&K government had seized all newspapers published in the Valley for one day, February 10, 2013.

For most of Saturday, cable TV networks also remained off air in the Valley. The owner of a network claimed that late on Friday night, a police team in civvies had arrived at their office and forced them to switch off the transmission.

“We have four to five lakh subscribers in several districts, including Srinagar,” he said. “For the last few days, they were forcing us to switch off the news channels, but when we didn’t succumb to pressure, they came to our office and switched off the transmission.”

The cellular networks are already heavily restricted. In north Kashmir, that saw one death in fresh protests Saturday, the government has snapped both cellular and landline networks, making it virtually impossible to communicate with anyone there. In central and South Kashmir, only BSNL mobile phone and landlines are working, while cellular networks of other service providers have been snapped. After days of remaining disrupted, BSNL services in central and south Kashmir were resumed, sources said, in the wake of the Amarnath Yatra.
http://indianexpress.com/article/in...a-blockade-newspaper-raid-staff-held-2918852/

 
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Excellent move...All propaganda machinery should be dealt this way
 
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41 Dead In Kashmir Clashes, Cable TV Restored But Newspapers Gagged: 10 Updates

Srinagar:

One more person died in firing by security forces after clashes in Kashmir on Saturday, taking the number of deaths in the violence triggered by the killing of terrorist Burhan Wani to 41. Cable TV services were suspended for more than 12 hours and newspapers have alleged a media gag.
Here are the top 10 developments in the story:
  1. A man person was killed and two injured after security forces opened fire on a crowd when they attacked a police post in Kupwara district of north Kashmir.
  2. Small protests were reported in some parts of the Valley but the protesters were chased away by security personnel who resorted to baton charge, an official said.
  3. Journalists and editors sat on a protest in Srinagar after being told by the state government not to publish newspapers. From today, newspapers will not be sold on newsstands but online editions will continue, they said.
  4. Newspapers in Kashmir reported raids by police on their offices, arrest of employees and seizure of printing plates yesterday. Greater Kashmir, the largest circulated daily in the Valley, said around 50,000 copies of their newspaper were confiscated yesterday.
  5. "This is a press emergency in Kashmir. This kind of gag is not the first but this time the government has formally banned us from publishing newspapers. We don't know when it will be lifted," said Shujat Bukhari, editor of Rising Kashmir.
  6. Senior government sources told NDTV that the gag was ordered because the distribution of the newspapers would mean movement of vehicles in violation of the eight-day long curfew in all 10 districts.
  7. Cellphone and internet services remained disabled in large parts of Kashmir to prevent the spread of rumours that could provoke violence. All telecom operators had been asked to suspend services on Friday.
  8. Cable operators said that they had been allowed to restore their services but warned not to carry Pakistani channels. "We have not received anything in writing but we were told to shut the operations. Police didn't given us any reason but we had to follow the order," Rufail Shafi, a cable operator, told NDTV.
  9. The Amarnath Yatra, suspended amid the violence, resumed from Jammu yesterday under tight security.
  10. More than 2,000 have been injured in violent protests that broke out after the killing of Burhan Wani, poster boy of Kashmir's new-age militancy, last Friday.
http://www.ndtv.com/india-news/41-d...d-10-updates-1432223?pfrom=home-lateststories
 
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India stops Kashmir newspapers from printing amid unrest
AP — PUBLISHED 32 MINUTES AGO
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Kashmiri journalists hold placards as they protest against the government in Srinagar, India- held Kashmir.─AP
SRINAGAR: Authorities in India's portion of Kashmir have shut down printing presses and temporarily banned newspapers from publishing in a sweeping information blackout after days of anti-India protests left dozens of people dead in the volatile region.

State government spokesman and Education Minister Nayeem Akhtar said the measures were aimed at saving lives and strengthening peace efforts. The government says 36 people — 35 civilians and a police officer — have been killed in clashes between protesters and security forces, while local human rights groups and newspapers say at least 40 have died.

Related: Death toll hits 38 as clashes spread in Indian-held Kashmir

A strict curfew was in effect in troubled areas for the ninth straight day Sunday, with hundreds of thousands of people trying to cope with shortages of food and other necessities. Tens of thousands of government troops patrolled mostly deserted streets in the region, where shops and businesses remained closed.

Since 1989, more than 68,000 people have been killed in the uprising against Indian rule and the subsequent Indian military crackdown.

Unwilling to take any chances, Indian authorities appear to be persisting with their clampdown to avoid aggravating tensions in view of Pakistan's call for a "black day" on Tuesday to protest India's handling of dissent in Kashmir.

Related: PM slams Indian atrocities in held Kashmir

On Friday, Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif vowed Pakistan would continue extending political, moral and diplomatic support to Kashmiris. He said he called for observing the "black day" to express solidarity with "Kashmiris who are facing atrocities at the hands of Indian forces."

The largest street protests in recent years in India's portion of Kashmir erupted last week after Indian troops killed the popular young leader of the largest separatist group fighting against Indian rule in the region.

Information has been thin, with most cellular and internet services, as well as landline phone access, not working in the troubled areas, except for Srinagar, the main city in the Indian portion of Kashmir.

Police began raiding newspaper offices and seizing tens of thousands of local newspapers on Saturday, imposing a ban on their printing until Monday. They also detained scores of printing press workers.

Newspaper editors denounced the government action and termed it "gagging and enforcing emergency on media."

Related: Information blackout in held Kashmir

The Kashmir Reader, a daily English newspaper, said on its website Sunday that "the government has banned local media publications in Kashmir," and called on its readers to "bear with us in this hour of crisis." Most English dailies, however, continued uploading news onto their websites.

Editors and journalists held a protest march in Srinagar late Saturday, carrying placards reading "Stop censorship" and "We want freedom of speech."

Meanwhile, anti-India protests have persisted, marked by clashes between rock-throwing Kashmiris and troops firing live ammunition, pellet guns and tear gas.

Clashes were reported in several places in northern Kashmir on Sunday, and at least six people were injured, police said.

Also Read: India-held Kashmir celebrates Eid with Pakistan

In the latest fatality late Saturday, government forces fired bullets at villagers who threw stones at them and tried to torch a police station in a remote village in the northern Kupwara area, close to the highly militarized Line of Control dividing Kashmir between India and Pakistan, a police official said.

One young villager was killed and at least two other people were wounded in the firing, he said, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to reporters.

Authorities on Sunday extended the summer break for schools and colleges for a week, until July 24.
 
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