After yet another internet cut in Indian-administered Kashmir, Reporters Without Borders (RSF) has condemned the rapid growth in India’s use of this crude form of censorship and called on the federal authorities to overhaul legislation so as to guarantee the universal right to online news and information.
“The Indian authorities are currently disconnecting the internet at a rate of ten times a month, each time depriving an average of several hundred thousand people of all online information.”
The press release was released after the latest incident on July 5 in Shopian district where the internet was disconnected as a “preventive measure” after a gun battle between militants and security forces.
The RSF cited the Software Freedom Law Centre which says it was 61st time that the internet was cut somewhere in India since the start of 2019 and the 45th time in the Indian-administered Kashmir.
This was two-fold record: India disconnects the internet more than any other country and the frequency of the cuts continued to soar in the first half of 2019, it added.
“Disconnecting the internet prevents journalists from working because it prevents them from accessing their most basic sources, and it deprives the public of reliable and independently-reported information,” said Daniel Bastard, the head of RSF’s Asia-Pacific desk.
“The violations of the freedom to inform that these internet cuts represent are all the more shocking for being the result of measures taken in a completely arbitrary manner by local or federal authorities. The union government should amend its legislation as quickly as possible in order to guarantee every citizen’s right to unrestricted and unconditional access to online information.”
“According to RSF’s analysis, around a third of the internet cuts last 24 hours but some last much longer. This was the case in July 2017 in Kashmir, where an online blackout imposed in response to protests about a separatist leader’s death continued for almost five months.”
The RSF also cited the example of Darjeeling where in 2018 there was no internet for 100 days “on the purported grounds of preventing pro-autonomy militants from agitating”.
According to the RSF, three pieces of legislation are used by district or state authorities to impose online censorship. In most cases, they use section 144 of the code of criminal procedure, a vaguely-worded provision giving local governments the “power to issue orders for immediate remedy in urgent cases of nuisance or apprehended danger.” The lack of any definition of the extent of this provision’s application gives the authorities enormous leeway.
The second most often invoked provision is in the 1855 Indian Telegraph Act, a hangover from the colonial era. Although the modern-day internet clearly has little in common with 19th century telegrams, article 5 of this law is often used to impose internet cuts on the grounds of a “public emergency” or for the sake of “public safety.”
The federal communications ministry tried to modernize the provisions in August 2017 by issuing the “Temporary Suspension of Telecom Services (Public Emergency or Public Safety) Rules,” which stipulate that any internet suspension order issued by the ministry of home affairs or its equivalent in one of India’s states must be reviewed by a dedicated committee within 24 hours.
India is ranked 140th out of 180 countries in the World Press Freedom Index 2019 of RSF.
“The Indian authorities are currently disconnecting the internet at a rate of ten times a month, each time depriving an average of several hundred thousand people of all online information.”
Also read: “Space For Media Freedom Rapidly Shrinking In India”
The press release was released after the latest incident on July 5 in Shopian district where the internet was disconnected as a “preventive measure” after a gun battle between militants and security forces.
The RSF cited the Software Freedom Law Centre which says it was 61st time that the internet was cut somewhere in India since the start of 2019 and the 45th time in the Indian-administered Kashmir.
This was two-fold record: India disconnects the internet more than any other country and the frequency of the cuts continued to soar in the first half of 2019, it added.
“Disconnecting the internet prevents journalists from working because it prevents them from accessing their most basic sources, and it deprives the public of reliable and independently-reported information,” said Daniel Bastard, the head of RSF’s Asia-Pacific desk.
Also read: A Small Number of Companies and Conglomerates Dominate India’s media, Some Have Political Ties: RSF
“The violations of the freedom to inform that these internet cuts represent are all the more shocking for being the result of measures taken in a completely arbitrary manner by local or federal authorities. The union government should amend its legislation as quickly as possible in order to guarantee every citizen’s right to unrestricted and unconditional access to online information.”
“According to RSF’s analysis, around a third of the internet cuts last 24 hours but some last much longer. This was the case in July 2017 in Kashmir, where an online blackout imposed in response to protests about a separatist leader’s death continued for almost five months.”
The RSF also cited the example of Darjeeling where in 2018 there was no internet for 100 days “on the purported grounds of preventing pro-autonomy militants from agitating”.
According to the RSF, three pieces of legislation are used by district or state authorities to impose online censorship. In most cases, they use section 144 of the code of criminal procedure, a vaguely-worded provision giving local governments the “power to issue orders for immediate remedy in urgent cases of nuisance or apprehended danger.” The lack of any definition of the extent of this provision’s application gives the authorities enormous leeway.
The second most often invoked provision is in the 1855 Indian Telegraph Act, a hangover from the colonial era. Although the modern-day internet clearly has little in common with 19th century telegrams, article 5 of this law is often used to impose internet cuts on the grounds of a “public emergency” or for the sake of “public safety.”
Also read: Modi’s Crackdown On Press Freedom Has ‘Almost Killed Media’, Says Indian Publication
The federal communications ministry tried to modernize the provisions in August 2017 by issuing the “Temporary Suspension of Telecom Services (Public Emergency or Public Safety) Rules,” which stipulate that any internet suspension order issued by the ministry of home affairs or its equivalent in one of India’s states must be reviewed by a dedicated committee within 24 hours.
India is ranked 140th out of 180 countries in the World Press Freedom Index 2019 of RSF.