Seized phones, laptops of Kashmir journalists should be returned: CPJ

An Indian paramilitary soldier stands guard at the entrance of Press Enclave, which houses several newspaper offices, in Srinagar, Indian-controlled Kashmir, Wednesday, Sept. 8, 2021. Police raided the homes of four journalists on Wednesday, triggering concerns of a further crackdown on press freedom in the disputed region. After the raids in Srinagar, the region’s main city, the four journalists were summoned to local police stations where they were questioned. Police did not specify the reason for the raids. (AP Photo/Mukhtar Khan)

New Delhi, September 8: Police in Jammu and Kashmir should stop raiding the homes of journalists and immediately return any seized electronic devices, the Committee to Protect Journalists said Wednesday.

Authorities in Srinagar, the main city in Jammu and Kashmir, Wednesday raided the homes of four journalists–Svhowkat Motta, the editor of Kashmir Narrator magazine, freelance journalists Azhar Qadri and Abbas Shah, and Hilal Mir, who reports for the Turkey-based news outlet TRT World–according to news reports. Police seized documents and electronic devices, including cellphones and laptops, of the journalists and their spouses, and later summoned them to a local police station for questioning, according to the Associated Press.

CPJ was unable to directly contact the journalists because their phones had been confiscated by the police, and was unable to confirm whether the four reported to the police station or whether they are currently in detention.

“The repeated harassment of journalists in Indian-controlled Jammu and Kashmir needs to stop immediately,” said Steven Butler, CPJ’s Asia program coordinator, in Washington, D.C. “Police should halt any interrogations of and investigations into journalists Showkat Motta, Azhar Qaddri, Abbas Shah, and Hilal Mir, and return all electronic devices seized from the journalists’ homes.”

According to the news website Kashmir Observer, the police claimed that the raids were related to an investigation into an anonymous blog. The police had initiated an investigation in October 2020 after the blog listed 39 Kashmiri journalists as alleged “Indian agents,” as CPJ documented at that time.

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