Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

India restores incoming text messages in Kashmir

INDIA on Tuesday (10) was set to allow some incoming text messages into Kashmir, officials said, four months after they were first blocked when New Delhi moved to strip the region's autonomy.

The August 5 communications blackout which included cutting landlines, mobile phones and internet access has badly hit locals and businesses especially as texts are an integral part of banking processes.


Officials in Delhi said millions in the restive Himalayan region will be able to receive service messages from Wednesday (11), including one-time passwords from financial institutions.

They will still be unable to send messages, the officials said.

Passwords sent by SMS are widely used for many online purchases and financial transactions in the South Asian nation.

Companies and customers had complained the clampdown meant they were suddenly unable to conduct simple, day-to-day transactions.

Kashmiris said they had to resort to calling relatives or friends outside the valley home to more than seven million people after phone lines were gradually restored, to help them make purchases or pay their bills.

Text messaging services were restored in mid-October along with mobile phone lines, but then cut again by authorities a few hours later after a truck driver was killed by suspected militants and his vehicle set ablaze.

Indian security sources said then that the decision to cut the messaging services was taken to reduce the ability of militants to communicate.

Users still cannot access app-based messaging platforms as mobile internet services remain blocked.

 (AFP)

Add EasternEye As Your Trusted Source
preferred source on google news

More For You

west-yorkshire-abuse

Police said the victims had been "treated as commodities for the gratification of heartless predators."

(Photo for representation: iStock)

Twenty jailed for non-recent abuse of three girls in West Yorkshire

TWENTY people have been jailed for the sexual abuse of three girls in West Yorkshire, following a series of trials spanning nearly two years at Leeds Crown Court.

The offences, which included rape and indecent assault, took place in Dewsbury and Batley between 1995 and 2003. One victim was 12 years old when the abuse began. In some cases, victims were also supplied with Class A drugs, reported the BBC.

Keep ReadingShow less