‘Worse than Aleppo, Mosul, Homs’: Voices from Kashmir
By
Daanish Bin Nabi
Those affected by the
communication lockdown in Kashmir the most, are journalists and the media
organisations they work for. At the moment, there is a tussle going on in the
Valley between Indian and international media. While Indian television channel
reports show the local populace in Kashmir as happy with the decision of the
government to abrogate the special status of Jammu and Kashmir, the
international media has been showing ground realities, such as the curfew, the
protests and the clampdown.
In this tussle between
these two media giants, it is the local Kashmiri media whose voice is being
muzzled. It is they, the local media outlets and their reporters,
photographers, and other staff members, who come in the direct line of fire
from the corridors of power.
“We have not published
since the clampdown on August 5. We have no contact with our staff members
either,” says Shams Irfan, an associate editor at Kashmir Life. He says that
most staffers of Kashmir Life live in North and South Kashmir. There is absolutely
no way for the office to contact them and vice-versa.
Many working journalists
compare the present situation with the mass unrest of 2016 and find the present
situation worse. “We used to work regularly in the 2016 unrest, but not
anymore. There is no internet, so all the online breaking news has come to a
grinding halt. Even if we somehow manage to get access to the internet, no
officials come on record to confirm any news. So, we thought it would be better
to suspend our online section for the time being,” an online editor of a local
daily says.
Many of the journalists
interviewed did not wish to be identified from fear of reprisal or arrests.
Another local weekly, The
Kashmir Walla, put out its last issue on August 4. Thereafter, it has not been
published. “Our website is down since the last 14 days. We have no contact with
our staff members or designers. Our printing press has also run out of raw
material,” says its editor, Fahad Shah.
Shah says if any of his
reporters file a story it will be sort of “incomplete” as their movements have
been confined to Srinagar city. “We have limited access to information. There
is no way we can contact officials to confirm any incident.”
The ‘Media’ Centre
Although the authorities
have established a media centre at a local hotel in Srinagar, many journalists
hesitate to visit it and file stories from there. A total of five desktops have
been established for the close to 200 working journalists in the city. At
present, Kashmir has also been stormed by New Delhi-based journalists. This has
made it even more difficult for local reporters to get their hands on the few
desktops available.
“I have not visited the
media centre since it was established. It is very difficult to work from there
due to the heavy rush of journalists,” says local journalist Junaid Kathju.
Many journalists have to
travel from North and South Kashmir to their office headquarters in Srinagar in
order to deliver their footage or photographs in person.
“I travel from Pulwama,
South Kashmir, every two days in order to deliver photographs and video footage
at out office in Srinagar. The government and security forces do stop
[journalists] while [they are] travelling to Srinagar but [they] only check the
identity card and allow us to move,” says photojournalist Nissar-ul-Haq.
Journalists also say that
the internet should at least be allowed to media organisations so that they can
verify news and kill rumours. “We cannot operate from the media centre because
it has a limited access. The authorities should at least give [full internet]
access to the media. It will kill the rumours that are floating massively at
this time in the Kashmir valley,” says Fahad Shah.
In the 21st century,
supposedly a technology-driven era, the people of the northern parts of J&K
are going through the worst communication lockdown that the region has ever
witnessed. People here say that such harsh measures were not even been
witnessed during the active conflicts in Syria or Iraq.
“When the wars in Aleppo
and Homs in Syria were at their peak, SOS messages from the Syrians still used
to trend [online]. Similarly, when the war in Mosul was raging in Iraq, once
again, SOS messages could be seen on Twitter. Internet services were not
snapped even in those active conflict regions. In Kashmir, we are observing the
worst communication gag in the last 30 years,” says a local media person from
the Bagh-e-Mehtab area of Srinagar, who did not wish to be identified.
This person says that a
multiple-tier communication gag has been imposed in the Valley. “First, there
is no mobile service. Second, the internet has been blocked. Third, landline
phones are dead. Fourth, the inter-person communication has also been gagged
because of the curfew-imposed across the Valley,” he adds.
Not Just Journalists
Employees from far-flung
areas in the Kashmir Valley are also finding it difficult to communicate with
their families at home due to the unprecedented lockdown. “I am not able to
speak with my family members. There has been no contact with them since I have
joined work after the Eid holidays,” says Bilal Ahmad Bhat, who works at a
local shop in Srinagar city.
Bhat, a resident of Hajin
area of North Kashmir, returns to his native place during the wee hours on
weekends to meet his family. “During the 2016 civil unrest, I was able to talk
with my family since the mobile phones were functional but today the situation
[of complete blanking out of communications] is worrisome,” he said.
Bhat says he has to travel
a minimum of 80 kilometers on weekends just to meet his family in Safapora area
of Hajin in Bandipora district of North Kashmir; a journey he must make if he
wants to check on their well-being—and they his.
The doctors in Kashmir
valley have also been on tenterhooks. To reach their hospitals and attend to
their patients has been next to impossible after the communication gag. They
are unable to reach their hospitals on time.
“My mother is a doctor at a
primary hospital in Srinagar. A few days back [Friday morning], an ambulance
driver came to our home with a patient’s details written on a piece of paper.
It was sheer good luck for the patient that my mother was able to reach the
hospital despite these curbs and saved the patient,” says a resident of the
Nigeen area of Srinagar.
The same resident says that
he finds the curbs in Kashmir unprecedented. His sister lives in Bengaluru and
he has not been able to contact her for two weeks. Some relatives visited his
home on Eid but they have not seen them thereafter.
People in Kashmir have
resorted to old means of communication such as visiting the homes of relatives
or friends in person to know their whereabouts.
“When you see your friends
and relatives in person only then do you stop worrying about them. If you don’t
see them, at least twice a day, you start getting worried. This need for
physical confirmation is a must in Kashmir these days,” says a student who
lives in the Rafiabad area of North Kashmir.
He says that locals have to
ask “ten different people at ten different locations” about the whereabouts of
their friends or relatives, as they strive to pick up any reassuring
information about their loved ones.
Published
by Newsclick on 24 August 2019