Mon 20 April 2020:
Police in Indian-administered Kashmir have booked a female photojournalist under the stringent Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA) for indulging in “anti-national activities” on social media.
Masrat Zahra, a 26-year-old photojournalist from the region’s main city of Srinagar, is accused of “uploading anti-national posts [on Facebook] with criminal intentions to induce the youth”.
A statement by Srinagar’s Cyber Police Station on Saturday said it received information through “reliable sources that one Facebook user namely ‘Masrat Zahra’ is uploading anti-national posts with criminal intention”.
“The Facebook user is also believed to be uploading photographs which can provoke the public to disturb law and order. The user is also uploading posts that tantamount to glorify the anti-national activities and dent the image of law enforcing agencies besides causing disaffection against the country,” it said.
Police said a first information report (FIR) was filed on Saturday and an investigation is on. She has been summoned before the police on Tuesday.
The UAPA allows the government to proscribe individuals as “terrorists” and empowers the federal National Investigation Agency to probe such cases.
A person charged under the law can be jailed for up to seven years.
Zahra on Monday told Al Jazeera over the telephone that the police and government are trying to “muzzle the voices of journalists in Kashmir”.
“Police has nowhere mentioned that I am a journalist. They have said that I am a Facebook user,” she said.
Zahra said she had been charged for posting her already-published works over the years, calling the allegations “shocking”.
“I have been sharing my archival images which have already been published in different Indian and international organisations on social media for which I’m being booked,” she said.
Zahra’s work has appeared in several publications including The Washington Post, The New Humanitarian, TRT World, Al Jazeera, The Caravan and others.
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