| A curfew in Indian-administered Kashmir remains in place - along with curbs on mobile internet access and on some cable television services |
Several leading newspapers in
Indian-administered Kashmir say they have been have been raided by
police seeking to end a week of violent protests.
| The violence is the worst seen in the region for years |
"The clamp-down was necessitated as Pakistani channels that are beamed here through cable television network have launched a campaign aimed at fomenting trouble here," an unnamed Jammu and Kashmir government minister told the Reuters news agency.
"Some newspapers were also sensationalising the violence... We will take a decision on [their] restoration after 19 July." The Greater Kashmir, Rising Kashmir and the Kashmir Observer, are among the titles who said they were affected.
Abdul Rashid Mukhdoomi, printer and publisher of the Greater Kashmir, said that there were no orders "under which the printing and circulation of our newspapers were stopped".