Jammu and Kashmir:With the Bharatiya Janta Party-led central government clamping down on Kashmir by snapping all lines of communication after it decided to modify Article 370 that provided special status to Jammu and Kashmir, the residents of the Valley were bereft of information.
But, a rather humble and almost abandoned mode of communication came to the rescue of Kashmiris.
The radio broadcasts by Radio Kashmir and All India Radio helped people stay updated with the situation on the ground and get in touch with their relatives residing within or outside the Valley.
"When we woke up on August 5, and as we turned on the Television, there was no cable network, channels were banned, except from Lok Sabha TV and Rajya Sabha TV. We had to get hold of our old radio set, which was otherwise lying in a corner of the house, to get some information," said a Kashmiri youth.
Drawing parallels between a digitised India and a communication blackout in Kashmir, the youth said, "What pains us, even more, is that while on one hand country is being pitched as 'Digital India', Kashmir is being deprived of this basic facility."
Digital India is a campaign launched by the Government of India in order to ensure the Government's services are made available to citizens electronically by improved online infrastructure and by increasing Internet connectivity or by making the country digitally empowered in the field of technology.
Narrating the ordeal of fellow Kashmiris, another local youth from the Valley said, "Everything has come to a standstill since August 5. Only a few TV channels are working. So far as newspapers are concerned, apart from a handful of newspapers which are somehow managing to publish their papers, most of the papers have not been published since then. Radio and newspapers are the only forms of communication left for us now, to give and receive information."