Deccan Chronicle

INDIA, LYNCHINGS AND WHATSAPP

-

WHATSAPP SAID THAT IT IS RESTRICTIN­G THE ABILITY OF USERS IN INDIA TO FORWARD CONTENT, THE LATEST ATTEMPT TO CURB MOB VIOLENCE SPARKED BY RUMOURS SPREAD THROUGH THE HUGELY POPULAR APP. CRAZED MOBS IN INDIA HAVE KILLED 21 PEOPLE IN THE LAST TWO MONTHS OVER UNFOUNDED ALLEGATION­S FORWARDED ON WHATSAPP.

MOB RULE

India, a nation of 1.25 billion people, is no stranger to mob violence, with well-documented cases of crowds turning on victims for every manner of transgress­ion, real or imagined. But the spread of smartphone­s — there are a billion plus handsets, and data is cheap — to even the most remote corners has enabled rumours to be shared at lightning speed. In recent years, for example, there has been an escalation in “cow vigilantis­m” — Hindu extremists murdering Muslims and thrashing lowcaste Dalits accused of killing cows or eating beef. Many of the victims in other vigilante killings, such as those over child kidnapping rumours, are targeted because they are outsiders. Victims included homeless people, a transgende­r, two picnic goers and a 27-year-old software engineer.

A RUMOUR IS BORN

The rumour blamed for many of the recent incidents emerged over a year ago in eastern India, claiming strangers were sedating and abducting children. Seven people were killed there in two attacks in as many days. In February this year, the rumours resurfaced 1,000 miles away in western India, and reached the south by May. It was often accompanie­d by a grainy video purporting to show men on motorbikes stealing kids. The footage was in fact from a Pakistani public safety film. Other images supposedly showing dead Indian children with their organs stolen were in reality of Syrians killed in a gas attack.

POLICE POWERLESS

Indian police say there is no substance to the rumours. Authoritie­s have rounded up suspects and formed patrols, driving village to village to quash the rumours. In some areas, travelling musicians sing about the scourge of fake news. Authoritie­s in some states shut down internet access in a desperate effort to stop the hoax from spreading. But the campaigns had limited effect. In one instance, an official “rumour buster” was himself beaten to death. India’s Supreme Court told the government this week to make a new law to rein in “mobocracy”.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India