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Police confiscate books in IIOJK raids


SRINAGAR:

Police in Indian Illegally-Occupied Jammu and Kashmir raided bookshops on Thursday after authorities banned 25 books, including one by Booker Prize winner Arundhati Roy, saying the titles “excite secessionism” in the disputed region.

The raids came after the government accused the writers of propagating “false narratives” about IIOJK, “while playing a critical role in misguiding the youth” against the Indian state.

“The operation targeted materials promoting secessionist ideologies or glorifying terrorism,” police said in a social media statement.

“Public cooperation is solicited to uphold peace and integrity,” it said.

Authorities also seized Islamic literature from bookshops and homes after a similar directive in February.

Hurriyat leader Mirwaiz Umar Farooq said the ban “only exposes the insecurities and limited understanding of those behind such authoritarian actions”.

“Banning books by scholars and reputed historians will not erase historical facts and the repertoire of lived memories of people of Kashmir,” Farooq said on social media platform X.

The ban listed 25 books authorities said “have been identified that propagate false narrative and secessionism”, including Roy’s 2020 book of essays, “Azadi: Freedom, Fascism, Fiction”.

Roy, 63, is one of India’s most famous living authors but her writing and activism, including her trenchant criticism of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government, have made her a polarising figure.

Other books banned include titles by academics, including one of India’s foremost constitutional experts A.G. Noorani, and Sumantra Bose, who teaches political science at the London School of Economics.

Historian Siddiq Wahid said the edict contravenes the constitution, “which allows for the freedoms of speech and expression”.

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