India topped the global list of internet shutdowns for the fifth year in a row in 2022 with at least 84 disruptions, international digital rights organisation Access Now said in a report released on Tuesday in collaboration with the #KeepItOn coalition.
The report said India has accounted for approximately 58% of all documented shutdowns globally since 2016.
There were 12 shutdowns in Rajasthan, seven in West Bengal, and four each in Haryana and Jharkhand.
The report said the authorities “interfered with access during high-profile events such as protests, conflict, school exams, and elections”.
It added while shutdowns were lower than in 2021, the Union government’s refusal to document and publish orders for them and technical challenges in tracking likely mean not all disruptions were recorded.
Raman Jit Singh Chima, Access Now’s senior international counsel, and Asia Pacific policy director, said India shut down the internet more than any other country on earth.
Felicia Anthonio, the campaign manager of the #KeepItOn coalition of organisations around the world fighting internet shutdowns, said governments wield internet shutdowns as weapons of control and shields of impunity.
The Parliamentary Standing Committee on Communications and Information Technology this month asked the Department of Telecommunications (DoT) and the Union ministry of home affairs (MHA) to ensure the states and Union territories strictly complied with the rules and the Supreme Court’s guidelines when imposing telecom or internet shutdowns.
In 2020, the Supreme Court called access to the internet a fundamental right by extension as it pulled up the government for the telecommunications blackout in Jammu & Kashmir. It said the blackout cannot go on indefinitely.
The court said orders on blackouts must now be published with specific reasons and should be proportional to the concerns necessitating such suspension.
In its report, the parliamentary panel underlined the need for a mechanism to maintain a centralised database of all shutdowns orders as per its recommendation.
The panel said no efforts have been made to implement the recommendation. “No centralized data is maintained either by DoT or MHA and they are not aware of the number of internet shutdowns imposed by the States.”