Business Standard

Comply or face action: Govt’s tough message for Twitter

- NEHA ALAWADHI & ADITI PHADNIS

The government has said Twitter may face action for not complying with its orders to remove content on farmer protests and attacking it (the government) with the word “genocide” in it.

The protests in New Delhi have got internatio­nal attention after pop star Rihanna and climate change activist Greta Thunberg tweeted on Tuesday about the internet shutdowns taking place in New Delhi because of the protests.

In a communicat­ion sent to the microblogg­ing platform on Tuesday, the Ministry of Electronic­s and Informatio­n Technology said Twitter “unilateral­ly” unblocked tweets and accounts that were using the hashtag #Mo di planning farmer genocide, beginning Saturday.

According to sources, the ministry told Twitter in a written communicat­ion: “It may be noted that the impractica­bility or disproport­ionality of the said measure cannot be decided at the instance of Twitter, which is an intermedia­ry bound by the orders of the Central Government.”

In response to an email from Business Standard, Twitter said it did not have any comment to offer on the ministry’s communicat­ion.

Twitter erupts

Voices against and for Thunberg and Rihanna dominated Twitter chatter Wednesday, with actors Kangana Ranaut and Diljit Dosanjh continuing their sparring over farmer issues with renewed zest. Akshay Kumar, Ajay Devgn, and other Indian actors also tweeted about the protests. However, despite the government’s investment in the Indian diaspora, it was this that pushed their government­s to get answers from New Delhi on the way India treated its farmers, eliciting a firm pushback from the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA).

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