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 Centre hangs up on Kashmiris 

 
SIDDHARTH VARADARAJAN

TIMES NEWS NETWORK 
Times of India, Jan 4, 2002
 
NEW DELHI: It's the political equivalent of using a sledgehammer to swat a fly: In 
order to ensure the telephone system and the Internet in Jammu and Kashmir are not 
misused by militants, the Vajpayee government has simply switched off the Internet and 
effectively banned most Kashmiris from calling long-distance.

Even as the rest of the country literally rang in the New Year by calling friends and 
relatives around the country, people in J&K woke up to find they had, quite literally, 
been disconnected. 

While militants are still at liberty to communicate through walkie-talkies and 
satellite phones, a Srinagar housewife cannot go to a PCO to speak to her sister in 
Kupwara, a pujari in Jammu cannot speak to his son in Texas and correspondents in the 
state can no longer file news via the Internet or PCO fax.

Under orders from the communications ministry - acting on instructions from the 
Cabinet Committee on Security - Bharat Sanchar Nigam Ltd suspended all public STD and 
ISD facilities out of the state, as well as Internet services. 

Private subscribers and offices can still call the rest of the country, but the 
majority of people in J&K who rely on PCOs to communicate with the outside world have 
been thrown into the telephonic equivalent of solitary confinement. 

According to Jammu-based activist and writer Balraj Puri, the Centre's latest move is 
''another step in the isolation of the people of Jammu and Kashmir''. 

A former intelligence agency official with extensive experience in Kashmir told this 
correspondent that the ban ''won't stop the bad guys from talking to each other''. 

He pointed out that in any case it was never possible to dial Pakistan from the state 
and that ordinary Kashmiris would be inconvenienced and alienated. ''Beyond a point, 
such measures are counter-productive''.

Communications minister Pramod Mahajan's statement that the ''temporary'' ban has been 
imposed because of the ''border situation'' suggests the government wants to ensure 
spies do not convey details of troop movements using PCOs or e-mail. 

But additional troops have also been deployed on the Punjab, Rajasthan and Gujarat 
borders. ''Let the government suspend STD facilities from PCOs in these states'', said 
a Kashmiri journalist who asked not to be identified. ''Or have they decided that 
everyone in Jammu and Kashmir is anti-national?'' 
 
 

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