Occupied Kashmir's internet blackouts hinder health services, contact tracing

Published May 20, 2020
Occupied Kashmir is among the Indian regions worst hit by Covid-19, with confirmed cases increasing sharply from four in mid-March to more than 1,200 by mid-May. — AP/File
Occupied Kashmir is among the Indian regions worst hit by Covid-19, with confirmed cases increasing sharply from four in mid-March to more than 1,200 by mid-May. — AP/File

For three days without the internet or phone service this month, Rouf Ahmad found himself cut off from his family in occupied Kashmir while his mother was receiving treatment for the deadly coronavirus.

The 23-year-old sociology student is under quarantine in a hospital in Srinagar and could not contact the rest of his family to tell them about his mother’s condition as she was treated in the same hospital.

“I used to update my sisters and father many times a day about my mother’s status,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation over the phone.

“My frustration knew no bounds when I couldn’t do so for three days,” he added.

Communications blackouts imposed by the Indian government as part of an effort to quell political turmoil and armed uprising in occupied Kashmir are hampering the fight against the novel coronavirus, warn health experts and residents.

Weeks of slow or no internet are a regular occurrence in the disputed region. The latest restriction on high-speed internet access has been in place since August last year, when India revoked the special status of its only Muslim-majority state.

The Indian government reinstated low-speed 2G internet services five months later in January, but a blackout earlier this month massively set back health services and contact tracing efforts to curb the novel coronavirus, health experts said.

“The shutting down of the internet is not new to Kashmir,” said one Srinagar-based hospital doctor, who asked not to be named.

“But, this time around, we were shocked that we had to work without the internet even during the pandemic for a week,” he said, noting that the government had told health professionals not to talk to the press.

“We are pushed into the primitive world when the internet is shut down abruptly.”

When contacted for comment, police officials directed the Thomson Reuters Foundation to an official order posted on the police website.

It said the shutdown on May 6, implemented the day after security forces killed Kashmiri fighter Riyaz Naikoo in Pulwama district, was necessary due to the “likelihood of misuse of data services by anti-national elements”.

Knowing occupied Kashmir’s history of communication restrictions, Ahmad anticipates further shutdowns — mobile internet was again halted on Tuesday — but hopes he and his mother can get out of the hospital before then.

“I can’t bring myself to deal with another blackout. Our family is already facing an awful situation as my mother is battling Covid-19,” he said.

Contact tracing

Occupied Kashmir is among the Indian regions worst hit by Covid-19, with confirmed cases increasing sharply from four in mid-March to more than 1,200 by mid-May and about 16 deaths, according to official figures.

Health professionals at two major hospitals in Srinagar told the Thomson Reuters Foundation that during the recent communications blackout they were unable to consult with colleagues about coronavirus cases.

A health department official, who requested anonymity as he is not authorised to speak to the press, said the three days without mobile phone service put added strain on the region’s already stressed health system.

The blackout affected all but phones on pay monthly contracts, which are mainly used by government officials.

Doctors normally use messaging services like WhatsApp to send each other information about cases and communicate with patients, the official explained, adding that relying on phone calls in the shutdown was often inconvenient and time-consuming.

He noted that there was no way for health workers to carry out contact tracing, which involves tracking down infected people and finding everyone who has been near them, so they can get tested too.

“It was impossible to trace the contacts of Covid-positive cases in those three days as there was no way of reaching out to people,” said the official.

It was also impossible for Kashmiris to install the government’s contact-tracing app that Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said everyone in the country should download onto their phones in a televised address last month.

Health experts say contact tracing is key to keeping the virus in check.

Even a single day’s delay in contact tracing could be the difference between getting the virus under control and suffering a resurgence, according to researchers from the University of Oxford in Britain.

Owais Ahmad, the Officer on Special Duty at Kashmir’s Covid-19 control room, where he helps monitor the spread of the virus in the region, confirmed that the three-day blackout had impacted the rate of installation of the app.

About 100,000 people in the region have so far downloaded the app, he estimated.

But he added that he thinks it will pick up now that internet and mobile phone services have been restored.

“This is an extremely important app in the fight against Covid,” Ahmad said during an interview in his office.

Rise in internet shutdowns

India has said it cuts communications to prevent unrest in occupied Jammu and Kashmir, where a separatist insurgency has killed more than 40,000 people since 1989.

Kashmir is an internationally recognised disputed territory, claimed in full by both India and Pakistan, which have gone to war twice over it. Each country at present rules parts of the scenic Himalayan region, which has been divided between them by a UN-mandated line of control (LoC).

Multiple UN Security Council resolutions have recognised Kashmiris' right to self determination, and called for a plebiscite in the valley to ascertain its future.

The internet blackout in occupied Kashmir, which started in August and lasted 175 days, was among the world’s longest internet shutdowns implemented last year, according to digital rights group Access Now.

Last year, India experienced 121 shutdowns, out of a global total of 196, the group said in a recent report.

International rights groups have decried the rise in the use of communications shutdowns in recent years as governments from the Philippines to Yemen said they were necessary for public safety and national security.

The United Nations has said such measures cannot be justified as the world is trying to tackle a pandemic.

“Internet access is critical at a time of crisis,” David Kaye, United Nations special rapporteur on the right to freedom of expression, said in a statement in March.

“Human health depends not only on readily accessible health care. It also depends on access to accurate information about the nature of the threats and the means to protect oneself, one’s family, and one’s community.”

Ahmad at the Covid-19 control room rejected the claim that shutting down internet and mobile services had impacted healthcare in the region.

He said the communication blackout had been “managed by health workers”, without specifying further.

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