This image made from video released on August 10 by the occupied Jammu and Kashmir government purports to show life returning to normal at Dal Gate in Srinagar. — Jammu and Kashmir government via AP
On August 10, the start of Eidul Azha, India's foreign ministry released a slew of photos and videos. In one, an aerial shot showed brisk vehicle traffic on a bridge. Another showed a busy square in Srinagar, the region's main city, and another a crowded intersection on the road leading to Srinagar's famed attraction, Dal Lake. Another was labelled Pulwama, one of occupied Kashmir's most restive districts, and showed streets humming with activity, not a soldier or barricade in sight.
None of these scenes matched independent news reports.
The curfew was briefly eased for Friday prayers, but the following morning, many people remained indoors, with shops and most health clinics closed.
Another set of images released by the foreign ministry on August 12 depicted men and boys kneeling in prayer outside mosques in occupied Jammu and Kashmir. But some of the region's largest mosques were closed, and others in the government videos were mislabeled, purporting to show mosques in Kashmir but actually showing worshippers in Jammu.
Worried that the world was getting a distorted view, Kashmir Times Executive Editor Anuradha Bhasin filed a Supreme Court petition demanding an end to the communications restrictions, which she said were hampering the work of her staff. The court on Wednesday ordered the government to reply to the petition within seven days.
Read: India's Supreme Court issues notice to govt on petitions regarding revocation of Article 370
By limiting the ability of journalists to report on the region, she said, the coverage of Kashmir has been overwhelmingly biased in favor of Modi.
"The government has its own publicity department, but over and above that, you have these big moneyed television channels, you have certain sections of print media who are virtually working as extensions of the government publicity department," she told The Associated Press.
"They are also giving a one-sided picture," she said.
The Press Council of India, a media watchdog that is statutorily tasked with ensuring freedom of the press, has tried to intervene in Bhasin's case with its own petition, defending the ban as "in the interest of the integrity and sovereignty of the nation".
Header photo: This photograph released on Aug 10 by the occupied Jammu and Kashmir government purports to show life returning to normal in Srinagar. — Jammu and Kashmir government via AP