On July 8th 1996, an Indianbacked counterinsurgency militia kidnapped and detained 19 journalists in Kashmir. The journalists, who were released unharmed that same evening, were held as hostages by the militia to secure a meeting with the editors of Kashmir's leading newspapers. The 19 journalists were travelling together from Srinagar, the summer capital of Kashmir, to a press conference called by the Muslim Mujahideen, one of several Indianbacked militias in the region. They were intercepted at Anantnag, a town 50 kilometres (35 miles) south of Srinagar, by gunmen of another Indianbacked militia, the Jammu and Kashmir Ikhwan, and taken to the nearby headquarters of Ikhwan commander Hilal Haider.
Haider segregated six journalists who worked for the Kashmiri press: reporters Gulzar Ahmed and Abdul Qayoom of the Urdu daily "Uqab," Masood Ahmed of the Urdu daily "WadikiAwaz," Shujaat Bukhari of the Englishlanguage daily "Kashmir Times," Zahoor Shair of the Urdu daily "AlSafa," and photographer Maqbool Sahil of the Urdu weekly "Chattan." He said all six would be killed unless the editors of Srinagar's eight major daily newspapers appeared before him by noon the following day. The eight editors had disregarded a "ban" that Haider had ordered on their newspapers the previous week for having given the Ikhwan inadequate coverage. The editors, who were informed of the threat by phone, said they would not heed the summons.
Haider told the other 13 journalists
mostly correspondents for the Indian and international press
that they were free to leave. The 13, however, insisted on staying
until their colleagues were released as well. Sevenandahalf
hours after the abduction, and following protests to Indian authorities
by journalists in Srinagar, an elite commando unit known as the
Rashtriya Rifles intervened and secured the release of all 19
journalists.
Nineteen journalists detained on July 8th, by the
Jammu and Kashmir Ikhwan: Fayaz Ahmed, New Delhi Television,
Gulzar Ahmed, Uqab, Masood Ahmed, WadikiAwaz,
Shujaat Bukhari, Kashmir Times, Bilal Butt, ANI,
Javed Farooq, The Pioneer and Greater Kashmir, Arshad
Hussein, Zee Television, George Joseph, BITV, Fayaz
Kabli, Reuters, Merajuddin, Associated Press
Television, Sheikh Mushtaq, Reuters, Tauseef Mustafa,
AFP, Surinder S. Oberoi, AFP, Abdul Qayoom, Uqab,
Maqbool Sahil, Chattan, Afzal Shah, Kashmir Times,
Zahoor Shair, AlSafa, Amin War, Daily Excelsior,
and one unidentified, Chattan.
According to Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ),
militias sponsored by the Indian government have abducted journalists
on three occasions over the past year, and have been implicated
in at least one assassination attempt.