India orders reputed magazine to take down story on Kashmir army killings
The Caravan, a news and current affairs monthly, last week published a lengthy report on the deaths of three civilians detained by the Indian army in December after a deadly insurgent attack on troops.
An Indian news magazine said the government had ordered it to delete an online report that implicated soldiers in the torture and killing of civilians in India-administered Kashmir.
Rights groups say that restrictions on the press are increasingly common in India and particularly onerous in Kashmir, a restive Himalayan region where India has more than half a million troops permanently stationed.
The Caravan, a news and current affairs monthly, last week published a lengthy report on the deaths of three civilians detained by the army in December after a deadly insurgent attack on troops.
The magazine said on Tuesday that the information ministry had sent it an official order demanding the story be taken down within 24 hours.
"The order's content is confidential," the magazine said in a post on X, formerly Twitter. "We will be challenging this order."
Caravan did not respond to a request for comment. The information ministry declined to comment.
This is to inform readers we have received an order from the Ministry of Information & Broadcasting under Section 69A of the IT Act, directing us to take down this story in 24 hrs:https://t.co/wbaEfoZsJ8.
— The Caravan (@thecaravanindia) February 13, 2024
The order’s content is confidential. We will be challenging this order.
Critical reporting
The three men killed were part of a group rounded up by security forces in the aftermath of the December insurgent attack, which left three Indian troops dead.
India's army promised an inquiry into the detentions after news of the deaths became public, while others who were taken into custody said they were tortured.
Their accounts were corroborated by footage of some detainees being physically abused by security forces that was leaked and shared widely on social media soon afterwards.
Official takedown orders compelling the removal of critical reporting and opinion have become an increasingly common tool of Modi's government.
The order against Caravan was "reflective of the increasing censorship that is being imposed on speech on the internet in India," Prateek Waghre of the Internet Freedom Foundation, a local digital rights group, said.
"We're seeing more instances of such action for reporting that is inconvenient for the government," he added.
India has fallen 21 spots to 161 out of 180 countries in the World Press Freedom Index, compiled by Reporters Without Borders, since Modi took office in 2014.