Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Global tweets energise rural, tech-savvy social media team

- Zia Haq letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: A surge in global support for the months-long farmers’ agitation against three agricultur­al laws, led by popstar Rihanna and Swedish climatecha­nge icon Greta Thunberg, has energised a small, rural, tech-savvy team behind the stir’s internatio­nal outreach. It has also brought fresh challenges: internet clampdowns and suspended social media accounts.

Social media platforms such as Facebook, Youtube and Twitter have played a central role in the farmers’ protests going global, as supporters scattered around the world have amplified the protests. The government directed Twitter to act against about 250 accounts that posed a “grave threat to public order”.

Tens of thousands of farmers have blocked entry points into New Delhi for more than two months, demanding the repeal of three laws passed in September last year.

Farmers have tapped an array of social-media and messaging platforms – Snapchat, Firechat, Signal and so on – to spread informatio­n from the protests in five sites around the Capital. Social media tools have given the protesters an edge in reaching supporters globally.

The idea of a digital wing, alongside the physical protests, was not among plans of the farmers until “misinforma­tion” and “propaganda” to tarnish the agitation went viral, said Baljeet Singh Sandhu, the head of the digital team and vice-president of the Majha Kisan Committee, a farm organisati­on.

“We have been called Khalistani terrorists and what not? We knew that we had to counter it,” Sandhu said. Khalistani is a reference to supporters of a Sikh separatist movement.

Early in December last year, a team of five tech-savvy farmers brought their laptops from villages and got going under a rainslick tarpaulin tent, known as the “hub,” at the Singhu border.

The digital arm of the Samyukt Kisan Morcha, a platform of farm unions leading the protests, called the Kisan Ekta Morcha, has five members -- two farmers are from Punjab, two from Haryana and one from Rajasthan.

The team records videos, devises hashtags, takes photograph­s and streams press conference­s. They tweet slogans and videos in thousands every day.

Its Twitter account by the same name, ordered to be shut down by the government, has 186,288 followers while its Instagram account has 219,169 followers. Their Youtube channel as 1.2 million subscriber­s.

On December 21, the Facebook page of the Kisan Ekta Morcha was gaining followers so rapidly within a span of a few hours that Facebook’s internal algorithms mistakenly flagged it as spam, leading to a shutdown.

A plethora of anti-walmarters and opposers of big corporatio­ns in the US and elsewhere, apart from independen­t farm organisati­ons, have also picked up the thread. Cities where demonstrat­ions have been held include global financial hubs, New York, Sydney and London. Protests have also been organised in other overseas towns and cities including Leicester in the UK; Sacramento, Texas; Melbourne, Australia; and Ontario, Canada.

Mewa Singh, the head of Nonresiden­t Indian Council in Punjab’s Ropar, said his office constantly coordinate­d with Indians abroad on making the protests global. “My son, a resident of Houston coordinate­d the protests there,” he said.

FARMERS SAY THEY STARTED DIGITAL OUTREACH TO COUNTER RISING ‘MISINFORMA­TION’ AND ‘PROPAGANDA’

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