Kashmir news portal vacates office after India crackdown

Indian paramilitary troopers carry out a search operation at a park in Srinagar, Kashmir, on August 7, 2023. (Photo courtesy: AFP/File)
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Updated 21 August 2023
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Kashmir news portal vacates office after India crackdown

  • Critics have linked the shuttering of The Kashmir Walla news portal to a larger press crackdown
  • Indian PM Narendra Modi has been accused by critics of stifling opposition and critical media

NEW DELHI: A news portal in Indian-administered Kashmir was forced to dismantle and vacate its office in Srinagar city on Monday, two days after its website and social media accounts were blocked.

Critics have linked the shuttering of The Kashmir Walla news portal to a larger press crackdown in the disputed region where dozens of journalists have been regularly summoned by police and questioned about their work since 2019, when New Delhi revoked the territory’s partial autonomy and brought it under direct rule.

“Six persons used to sit at the office and we removed all our belongings and emptied out the premises today,” a staff member at the news portal told AFP on Monday.

India’s Hindu nationalist Prime Minister Narendra Modi — who remains widely popular, and looks set to seek a third successive five-year term in office next year — has been accused by critics of stifling opposition and critical media. He denies the charge. 

On Saturday, “we woke up to another deadly blow of finding access to our website and social media accounts blocked,” staff at the outlet said in a statement late Sunday.

Their Internet service provider blamed the blocks on a government order, and they were also serviced an eviction notice by their landlord, the statement added.

“The opaque censorship is gut-wrenching. There isn’t a lot left for us to say anymore,” it said.

Fahad Shah, the portal’s editor — accused of “glorifying terrorism” and “spreading fake news” by Indian authorities — was arrested last year and remains in jail.

Kashmir has been divided between India and Pakistan since both countries were granted independence from British rule in 1947, and both claim the former Himalayan kingdom in full.

Over half a million Indian soldiers are deployed in the territory, battling a running insurgency from rebel groups demanding independence.

The fighting has killed tens of thousands of people, mostly civilians.


Spain expects tourist arrivals to keep growing in 2026

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Spain expects tourist arrivals to keep growing in 2026

  • “If growth continues this year, we will reach 100 million foreign tourists,” Hereu said
  • Spain is the world’s second most visited country after France

MADRID: Spain expects to host more foreign visitors, and for them to spend more in total, in 2026 after the country welcomed a record 97 million tourists last year, Tourism Minister Jordi Hereu told reporters on Thursday.
“If growth continues this year, we will reach 100 million foreign tourists, but we aren’t focused on that,” Hereu said, adding that last year’s figure represented a 3.5 percent increase on 2024, while revenues from tourism rose 6.8 percent to 135 billion ⁠euros ($157 billion).
Spain is the world’s second most visited country after France, and tourism is a major source of revenue for the economy, which has by far outgrown its European peers in the past two years.
According to tourism industry lobby Exceltur, the sector accounted for an estimated 13 percent of Spain’s gross ⁠domestic product in 2025.
Hereu said in the first four months of this year — including the busy Easter holiday season — authorities were forecasting a 3.7 percent rise in visitors from abroad to 26 million people, who they expect will spend 35 billion euros, up 2.5 percent from the same period last year. The Mediterranean country’s tourism boom, while boosting its economy, has led to tension in many visitor hotspots due to the indirect effect on housing prices, congestion and natural resource degradation problems. Some ⁠popular destinations like Ibiza have cracked down on short-term rentals.
Hereu said Spain’s model was moving away from seasonality, as data showed that tourist spending had grown by 53 percent in the low and mid-seasons compared with pre-pandemic year 2019, and by 34 percent in the high season. Two-thirds of tourists who visited Spain in 2025 intend to return as they see it as a safe place, the minister said, adding that there was no sign of global geopolitical issues affecting flight availability or booking trends.