Jammu And Kashmir Police Question Three Journalists Amid Social Media Ban cpj.org
New Delhi, February 19, 2020—Jammu and Kashmir police have summoned three journalists this month, including photojournalist Kamran Yousuf, who was questioned about social media activity, according to news reports and CPJ interviews. In January, after a lengthy communications shutdown in the region, the Indian government restored access to under 1500 “white-listed” websites, not including social media.
Yousuf, who works for news website Newsclick, was detained for two hours on February 16 following a nighttime raid on his home in Pulwama district, according to local news reports citing the Kashmir Press Club. Naseer Gani of the weekly Outlook magazine separately told CPJ he and Haroon Nabi of the Current News Service agency were detained in Srinagar for four hours on February 9. The pair were questioned for publishing and circulating a statement by a banned separatist political party, according to the Indian Express and the Hindustan Times. Local police said this week that they would investigate the use of virtual private networks (VPNs) to access social media under an anti-terror law after the video of a separatist leader circulated online, according to Outlook and the Indian Express.
“In these critical times in Jammu and Kashmir, police must stop harassing and questioning journalists and allow them to do their jobs without fear of reprisal,” said Aliya Iftikhar, CPJ’s senior Asia researcher in New York. “Instead of treating social media access as a crime, the Indian government should lift all remaining internet restrictions and let journalists get back to work.”
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