pkpatriotic
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Friday, April 25, 2008
OCCUPIED SRINAGAR: Local authorities in the Indian-occupied Kashmir have ordered most Pakistani cable stations off the air in the territory, cable operators said on Thursday.
The popular Pakistani channels are the only source of entertainment and current news programming in the Indian-occupied Kashmir. The Indian cable operators in Kashmir carried several Pakistani channels, including state-run PTV, for several years. It was not clear why the local officials ordered the cuts now.
The state government in Kashmir sent cable operators an order on Wednesday directing them to stop airing most of the channels because they had not been approved by India's federal ministry of information and broadcasting, said Irfan Ahmed, who runs the main cable operation in Srinagar.
Ahmed said that it was the first time he received a written government order about the Pakistani channels, and that he had complied. Other cable operators also stopped airing channels.
Raveen Singh, a spokesman for the information ministry in New Delhi, said that there was not a blanket ban on Pakistani TV channels but that all of them had to be cleared by the ministry. It's up to the local authorities to enforce the rules, he said.
Cable operators said they were still broadcasting one Pakistani channel, QTV, which has Islamic-oriented programs on topics like mysticism, ethics and dialogue between different schools of thought in Islam. They said the channel was not mentioned in the order.
The cuts angered many Kashmiris, who said they relied on Pakistani channels for reliable news about their homeland. Pakistani TV provides comprehensive coverage of what is going on in Kashmir, while Indian media are generally biased, said college student Faisal Ahmed.
Others said they related to the Pakistani channels entertainment programming far more than the Indian channels song-and-dance, Bollywood-type shows. These channels are the link to our cultural and religious moorings, said school teacher Abdul Hamid. It was not the first time Kashmir cable operators have had their content challenged.
Last year they dropped four foreign television channels after Islamic militants accused them of showing obscene content. Political leaders in the Indian-held Kashmir expressed anger at the government order that forced local cable operators to stop airing Pakistani channels.
Kashmiri leaders said the Pakistani channels, which went off the air Wednesday, were targeted for reporting on the human rights situation in the state, where a separatist insurgency has raged for almost two decades. The order is an act of frustration, said Mirwaiz Umer Farooq. The Pakistani media had begun to comment on the human rights situation in Kashmir, especially the situation of unmarked graves.
The situation in Kashmir has been tense in recent weeks, with police tear gassing protesters calling for a proper investigation into 1,000 unmarked graves discovered over the past two years.
Farooq said the move to bar the channels had dented the claims about the improving situation in the state. The move to stop airing Pakistani channels shows the real face of Indian government, said Syed Ali Shah Geelani. They are talking about normalisation of the situation, friendship and trade but what can one understand from this decision?"
Pro-India parties also expressed resentment. It goes against the freedom of the press, said Nizamuddin Bhat, general secretary of People's Democratic Party, which is part of the state's ruling coalition.
OCCUPIED SRINAGAR: Local authorities in the Indian-occupied Kashmir have ordered most Pakistani cable stations off the air in the territory, cable operators said on Thursday.
The popular Pakistani channels are the only source of entertainment and current news programming in the Indian-occupied Kashmir. The Indian cable operators in Kashmir carried several Pakistani channels, including state-run PTV, for several years. It was not clear why the local officials ordered the cuts now.
The state government in Kashmir sent cable operators an order on Wednesday directing them to stop airing most of the channels because they had not been approved by India's federal ministry of information and broadcasting, said Irfan Ahmed, who runs the main cable operation in Srinagar.
Ahmed said that it was the first time he received a written government order about the Pakistani channels, and that he had complied. Other cable operators also stopped airing channels.
Raveen Singh, a spokesman for the information ministry in New Delhi, said that there was not a blanket ban on Pakistani TV channels but that all of them had to be cleared by the ministry. It's up to the local authorities to enforce the rules, he said.
Cable operators said they were still broadcasting one Pakistani channel, QTV, which has Islamic-oriented programs on topics like mysticism, ethics and dialogue between different schools of thought in Islam. They said the channel was not mentioned in the order.
The cuts angered many Kashmiris, who said they relied on Pakistani channels for reliable news about their homeland. Pakistani TV provides comprehensive coverage of what is going on in Kashmir, while Indian media are generally biased, said college student Faisal Ahmed.
Others said they related to the Pakistani channels entertainment programming far more than the Indian channels song-and-dance, Bollywood-type shows. These channels are the link to our cultural and religious moorings, said school teacher Abdul Hamid. It was not the first time Kashmir cable operators have had their content challenged.
Last year they dropped four foreign television channels after Islamic militants accused them of showing obscene content. Political leaders in the Indian-held Kashmir expressed anger at the government order that forced local cable operators to stop airing Pakistani channels.
Kashmiri leaders said the Pakistani channels, which went off the air Wednesday, were targeted for reporting on the human rights situation in the state, where a separatist insurgency has raged for almost two decades. The order is an act of frustration, said Mirwaiz Umer Farooq. The Pakistani media had begun to comment on the human rights situation in Kashmir, especially the situation of unmarked graves.
The situation in Kashmir has been tense in recent weeks, with police tear gassing protesters calling for a proper investigation into 1,000 unmarked graves discovered over the past two years.
Farooq said the move to bar the channels had dented the claims about the improving situation in the state. The move to stop airing Pakistani channels shows the real face of Indian government, said Syed Ali Shah Geelani. They are talking about normalisation of the situation, friendship and trade but what can one understand from this decision?"
Pro-India parties also expressed resentment. It goes against the freedom of the press, said Nizamuddin Bhat, general secretary of People's Democratic Party, which is part of the state's ruling coalition.