FACEBOOK, TWITTER AND 20 OTHER SOCIAL MEDIA SITES AND ONLINE APPLICATIONS BLOCKED FOR ONE MONTH

SRINAGAR, India — India
has ordered internet service providers in Indian-controlled Kashmir to
immediately block Facebook, Twitter and 20 other social media sites and online
applications for one month, after several videos and photos depicting alleged
abuses of Kashmiris by Indian security forces sparked outrage and fueled
protests.
The government said the
restrictions ordered Wednesday were made "in the interest of maintenance
of public order." But Pranesh Prakash, policy director for the Indian
advocacy group the Center for Internet and Society, called it a "blow to
freedom of speech" and "legally unprecedented in India."
"It not only violates
the Indian constitution but also violates international law," he said.
Most of the applications
the government ordered blocked were still working Thursday. However, 3G and 4G
mobile connections in the Kashmir Valley have not worked for more than a week
now. Broadband and 2G connections have not been affected.
The government has often
halted internet service in the region in the past in an attempt
to prevent
anti-India demonstrations from being organized. But this is the first time
authorities have shut down social media following the circulation of videos of
alleged abuse by Indian soldiers.
Several recent clips,
captured in the days surrounding a violence-plagued local election April 9,
have proven to be especially powerful and have helped to intensify anti-India
protests.
One video shows a
stone-throwing teenage boy being shot by a soldier from a few meters (yards)
away. Another shows soldiers making a group of young men, held inside an
armored vehicle, shout profanities against Pakistan while a soldier kicks and
slaps them with a stick. The video pans to a young boy's bleeding face as he
cries. Yet another clip shows three soldiers holding a teenage boy down with
their boots and beating him on his back.
The video that drew the
most outrage was of young shawl weaver Farooq Ahmed Dar tied to the hood of an
army jeep as it patrolled villages on voting day. A soldier can be heard saying
in Hindi over a loudspeaker, "Stone throwers will meet a similar
fate," as residents look on aghast.
"When they were
driving me around, they were saying, 'We will shoot (you),' and were throwing
stones at my head," Dar told The Associated Press. "I was told not to
talk. In one of the villages, an elderly man begged for my release but they
didn't listen to him."
Police have since
registered a criminal case against unnamed Indian soldiers in that case, for
the first time citing a video as evidence. In addition, an army "internal
inquiry has been initiated into the jeep video," according to spokesman
Col. Rajesh Kalia.
But India's top law
officer, Attorney General Mukul Rohatgi, lauded soldiers for managing to defuse
a "nasty situation" by containing the protests and saving the polls.
"Why so much
noise?" he asked about the complaints. "Military operations cannot be
subject of such discussions on social media," Rohtagi told the Hindustan
Times newspaper.
Students across Kashmir
have been rallying this month at anti-India demonstrations, facing off against
heavily armed riot police and paramilitary soldiers.
"Most students like
me use social media, and some among us use stones to protest against India. Our
brothers (militants) use guns for the same purpose," said Aslam, a
22-year-old science major at the University of Kashmir who gave only his first
name out of fear for police reprisals.
Viral videos showing
police officers beating civilians or soldiers forcing children to do push-ups
in public have "not only outraged the residents here, but also
strengthened their belief that the remedy lies in relentlessly seeking justice
to end these foul practices," said Khurram Parvez of the Jammu-Kashmir
Coalition of Civil Society.
The rights group has
conducted decades of research and estimates that at least 200,000 people have
been tortured during Kashmir's decades-long separatist conflict fueled by
anti-India sentiment among a mostly Muslim population and a deployment of
hundreds of thousands of troops.
Kashmir's troubles began
in 1947, with the first days of Indian and Pakistani independence, as the two
countries both claimed the region in its entirety. They have since fought two
of three wars over their rival claims, each administering a part of the
territory divided by a heavily militarized line of control.
On the Indian side, most
public protest was peaceful until 1989, when armed rebels rose up demanding the
region's independence or merger with Pakistan. Nearly 70,000 people have been
killed in that uprising and the ensuing military crackdown.
Among the angriest now are
Kashmiris under 35, who have grown up in a politically radicalized society amid
the brutal armed conflict and high unemployment. They are also among the most
tech-savvy and engaged in social media, and make up two-thirds of the
territory's population of nearly 13 million.
Anti-India rebels have
also adopted social media. One charismatic rebel commander, Burhan Wani, became
a household name thanks to his rousing Facebook posts. His killing last year by
Indian forces sparked demonstrations and street clashes across Kashmir.
Meanwhile, pro-India
activists appear to have countered with their own videos, including two
recently circulated showing militants forcing people to chant anti-India
slogans at gunpoint.
Authorities have charged
three men with attacking an Indian paramilitary soldier after they were
allegedly seen in a video heckling the man.
The Indian chapter of
Amnesty International has condemned videos from both sides for inciting anger
and violence, and urged an investigation.
Indian police and
paramilitary officials accuse agitators of using social media to instigate
violence.
"There is misuse of
social media by the people who are inimical to the peace," said the
region's police director-general, S.P. Vaid.
Kashmiris accuse India of
doing too little to combat abuses. Military courts-martial have convicted 164
soldiers since 1990, punishing them with jail or dismissal from military
service, according to an army officer who spoke on condition of anonymity
because he was not authorized to speak with media. He said 96 percent of the
more than 1,000 complaints received since 1990 were found to be false and
fabricated.
The state government
itself cannot pursue abuse cases involving soldiers without permission from New
Delhi, which has never been granted despite state requests to prosecute more
than 50 cases in the last two decades of alleged murder, rape and other abuse.
In the past, Indian
authorities have dismissed videos and photos showing alleged abuse as propaganda
stunts aimed at destabilizing the India-based administration. Some in Kashmir
believe they were actually leaked by military authorities themselves to
intimidate locals.
One observer, New
York-based Kashmiri scholar Mohamad Junaid, posited that the "distribution
of these videos is also about a fragile masculinity reasserting itself"
over a population that has once again begun to aggressively challenge Indian
rule.
He and other experts
warned that India's heavy-handed rule and inability to placate local protesters
were pushing the region toward a dangerous impasse.
"The decision in New
Delhi seems to be to push Kashmir and Kashmiris to the wall, said Siddiq Wahid,
historian and former vice chancellor of a Kashmir university. "It's only
to be expected the resentment is going to reach new heights."
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