Categories: Top Stories

IOK: 48 dailies made ineligible for govt ads

SRINAGAR (AA): Authorities in Indian-administered Jammu and Kashmir have dropped 48 newspapers from a panel that makes periodicals eligible to run government advertisements, officials said Saturday.

While 10 dailies have been struck off the panel completely, eight others were suspended temporarily in Kashmir, Haris Handoo, joint director of information, told Anadolu Agency.

He said those that have been dropped temporarily could be added back on the panel if they adhere to government-mandated rules of, for example, on regular publishing and meeting required copy numbers.

The newspapers that were dropped from the panel completely now have to file a completely new application, he said, adding that many of them had flouted these rules.

In Jammu province, 30 newspapers have either been dropped from the panel completely or suspended temporarily.

Local newspaper owners have in the past criticized similar moves by the Indian government as a form of censorship by denying dailies with revenue from government ads.

In the run-up to Aug. 5, 2019, when India scrapped the region’s autonomy, advertisements were denied for several months to two major newspapers, Greater Kashmir and the Kashmir Reader. Both dailies had been critical of the state’s policies. In 2016, the Kashmir Reader was banned from publication for three months.

The Jammu and Kashmir government last year introduced a controversial “media policy,” in which it announced that its department of information and public relations would conduct a “background check” of every publisher, editor and reporter before their media outlet was granted “empanelment,” meaning official approval that makes a publication eligible for government advertisements.

“Any individual or group indulging in fake news, unethical or anti-national activities or in plagiarism shall be de-empaneled besides being proceeded against under law,” the new policy says.

In June, Reporters Without Borders, an international press advocacy group, urged India to immediately withdraw its “new media policy,” saying it handed unimpeded powers to authorities.

The policy allowed Indian officials to harass journalists and media through judicial action, as well as economically, if they “published content it doesn’t like,” it said in a statement, describing such conduct as “prior censorship.”

The Frontier Post

Recent Posts

Israel’s Gantz demands Gaza day-after plan by June 8, threatens to quit cabinet

JERUSALEM (Reuters): Israeli war cabinet minister Benny Gantz demanded on Saturday that Prime Minister Benjamin…

2 hours ago

Vietnam nominates public security minister to be new president

HANOI: Vietnam’s governing Communist Party has nominated the public security minister to be the next…

2 hours ago

In Canada, bodies go unclaimed as costs put funerals out of reach

TORONTO (Reuters): Some Canadian provinces have logged a jump in unclaimed dead bodies in recent…

2 hours ago

Nancy Pelosi’s husband’s attacker jailed for 30 years

SAN FRANCISCO (AFP): A man who attacked the elderly husband of former US House Speaker…

2 hours ago

Dar, Muqam to depart for Kyrgyzstan amid mob attacks

F.P. Report ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Saturday decided to send Deputy Prime Minister…

3 hours ago

Nawaz questions his disqualification

F.P. Report LAHORE: Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz supremo Mian Nawaz Sharif reiterated his long held position…

3 hours ago

This website uses cookies.