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Opinion: Internet Blackout in Pakistan-administered Kashmir — A Silent Punishment for Speaking Up

For more than a month now, Pakistan-administered Jammu and Kashmir has been suffering from a near-total internet blackout. What began after the September 29 protests — when thousands of Kashmiris took to the streets demanding their basic rights has turned into a slow, deliberate strangling of digital life.

The Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA), which regulates internet and mobile services in the region, has offered little explanation. Yet, the timing and nature of the restrictions leave little room for doubt: this blackout feels less like a technical failure and more like a punishment for dissent.

A Digital Siege in the 21st Century

In the modern world, internet access is no longer a luxury — it is a basic necessity, tied directly to livelihoods, education, and civic participation. Cutting off an entire region from connectivity is a violation not only of fundamental human rights but also of international humanitarian norms governing disputed territories.

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For the people of Muzaffarabad, Bagh, and Rawalakot, digital isolation has become part of daily life. Even when the internet works, connections are painfully slow. Users climb rooftops or stand at higher ground just to get a single bar of signal. Data packages are expensive and often function properly only during off-peak hours, usually late at night when most people are asleep.

While Mirpur and Kotli enjoy comparatively better connectivity, the rest of the region remains digitally starved. Across the border, Pakistan’s 4G services operate smoothly, revealing a stark contrast between how Islamabad prioritizes technological access for its citizens versus those living under its administrative control in Kashmir.

This disparity reinforces a painful truth: that the people of this region are being systematically marginalized — economically, politically, and now digitally.

The PTA’s Response and Public Pressure

Two days ago, a delegation from the Jammu and Kashmir Joint Awami Action Committee visited the PTA office in Muzaffarabad, giving the authority ten days to restore full internet access. Interestingly, within forty-eight hours, Facebook began to work without VPNs, yet TikTok was abruptly blocked — another arbitrary and opaque decision.

Such selective censorship exposes the extent of the state’s control over the digital sphere, where access is granted or revoked based on convenience and political calculation rather than public need.

When you silence a people’s ability to communicate, you do more than restrict data flow — you suppress their collective voice. In Kashmir’s case, the ongoing digital clampdown appears designed to mute dissent and limit the world’s ability to witness the realities on the ground.

For a region that already faces political uncertainty and economic hardship, depriving citizens of the internet is nothing short of collective punishment. It isolates communities, hinders journalism, disrupts education, and damages small businesses — all under the guise of “security concerns.”

Digital Justice

The restoration of full and unrestricted internet access must not be treated as a favor — it is a right. The PTA and the Government of Pakistan must recognize that denying digital freedom to millions of Kashmiris undermines the very principles of democracy and justice they claim to uphold.

At a time when the world is moving toward artificial intelligence and digital transformation, Kashmiris remain trapped in a 2G reality not because of technological limitations, but because of political control.

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