Bravo Lion
FULL MEMBER
- Joined
- Sep 30, 2016
- Messages
- 291
- Reaction score
- -4
- Country
- Location
ISLAMABAD —
Pakistan has banned Indian programs on local radio and television stations, the latest casualty of continuing military and political tension between the two countries.
The state-run Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory Authority announced the decision Wednesday, saying the decade-long unilateral concession is being canceled starting October 21.
The authority warned that violators of the ban would have their broadcasting licenses suspended without issuance of “show cause notices.”
The ban came after the Indian film industry barred Pakistani actors from its movies, and cinema associations refused to play movies featuring artists, singers and music directors from the neighboring country.
Wednesday’s announcement comes as Pakistani and Indian troops engage in intermittent exchanges of fire across the disputed Kashmir border referred to as the line of control.
The tensions increased after last month’s militant attack on a military base in Indian Kashmir that New Delhi alleges was planned on Pakistani soil.
Islamabad rejected the charges as an attempt to divert attention from what it alleges is Indian forces’ brutal suppression of a week of anti-India protests in Kashmir.
It dismisses the Indian efforts to isolate Pakistan as nothing but “a ploy to divert international attention from ongoing Indian oppression” in the Indian Occupied Kashmir region.
Pakistan has banned Indian programs on local radio and television stations, the latest casualty of continuing military and political tension between the two countries.
The state-run Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory Authority announced the decision Wednesday, saying the decade-long unilateral concession is being canceled starting October 21.
The authority warned that violators of the ban would have their broadcasting licenses suspended without issuance of “show cause notices.”
The ban came after the Indian film industry barred Pakistani actors from its movies, and cinema associations refused to play movies featuring artists, singers and music directors from the neighboring country.
Wednesday’s announcement comes as Pakistani and Indian troops engage in intermittent exchanges of fire across the disputed Kashmir border referred to as the line of control.
The tensions increased after last month’s militant attack on a military base in Indian Kashmir that New Delhi alleges was planned on Pakistani soil.
Islamabad rejected the charges as an attempt to divert attention from what it alleges is Indian forces’ brutal suppression of a week of anti-India protests in Kashmir.
It dismisses the Indian efforts to isolate Pakistan as nothing but “a ploy to divert international attention from ongoing Indian oppression” in the Indian Occupied Kashmir region.