Postpaid mobile services restored in Kashmir 72 days since lock down
India

Postpaid mobile services restored in Kashmir 72 days since lock down

Around 40 lakh postpaid mobile phones became operational Monday for the first time since communication lines were snapped following the scrapping of Article 370 in August.

   
A view of a deserted street during restrictions at Lal Chowk in Srinagar

A view of a deserted street during restrictions at Lal Chowk in Srinagar | PTI file

Srinagar: Postpaid mobile services on all networks were restored in the Kashmir Valley on Monday, 72 days after they were snapped following restrictions.

Some 40 lakh postpaid mobile phones have become operational from Monday noon.

Restrictions were imposed after the Centre on August 5 abrogated the state’s special status and bifurcated it into Union territories of Jammu and Kashmir, and Ladakh, which will come into being on October 31.

Partial fixed line telephony was resumed in the Valley on August 17 and by September 4, nearly 50,000 landlines were declared operational.

In Jammu, the communication was restored within days of the blockade and mobile internet was started around mid-August. However, after its misuse, internet facility on cell phones was snapped on August 18.


Also read: Free movement, no net, kids away from school — Kashmir 2 months after losing Article 370