Indian police clamp curbs on media coverage of IIOJK gunbattles

Journalists say the new rules are meant to coerce them into not reporting.

SRINAGAR:

Police in the Himalayan region of Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IIOJK) have asked journalists to refrain from live coverage of gun battles with freedom fighters fighting Indian rule in the territory or protests, calling such reports a provocation amounting to interference in their duties.

India has deployed tens of thousands of police and soldiers to keep the peace in the disputed Muslim-majority region after revoking its constitutional autonomy in 2019 to weld the region more tightly to the country.

In an order this week, the police chief in the besieged valley set out new guidelines for journalists covering the insurgency, in which attacks have targeted security forces.

“No operational content should be carried which is likely to incite violence or contains anything against maintenance of law and order, or which promotes anti-national sentiment,” police chief Vijay Kumar said.

Read more: Amnesty assails India over restrictions in IIOJK amid pandemic

Media were advised to stay away from the site of gun battles or situations that shaped as a challenge to law and order, and not engage in live coverage, he added.

Kumar said journalists’ right to freedom of speech and expression was subject to reasonable curbs, so as not to endanger the lives of others or compromise national security.

“Do not interfere in the professional and bonafide duty of police and security forces at encounter sites,” he said.

More than 50,000 people have died in the revolt that erupted in 1989, government figures show. Human rights and separatists put the toll at double.

In the past, police have said the presence of television cameras and journalists at trouble spots in IIOJK often encouraged people to come out in the streets and break the law by throwing stones.

But journalists said the new rules were meant to coerce them into not reporting.

“Press freedom is the cornerstone of a democracy and any attack on it undermines the democratic setup of which media is the fourth pillar,” the IIOJK Press Club said in a statement.

“Any such attack on press freedom and journalism is highly distressful.”

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