Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Behave responsibl­y on social media

Citizens should not react to anything they see, hear or read before verifying the facts

- SHASHI SHEKHAR Shashi Shekhar is editorinch­ief, Hindustan letters@hindustant­imes.com

The government can’t make people love me, but it can keep them from lynching me.’ While vacationin­g in Europe’s verdant valleys, one of my friends was reminded of these words by Martin Luther King Junior. The reason? Time and again, he was asked in a veiled manner whether Indians were a nation of rapists and blood-thirsty people. In response, he narrated glorious stories right from our ancient civilizati­on to modern-day economic progress, to no avail. The reason behind this humiliatio­n was the report by Thomson Reuters Foundation in which India was ranked as the most dangerous country in the world for women. Needless to say, he returned home to India with a heavy heart.

Now consider the news developmen­ts last week. A man who flaunts his devotion to Lord Rama on his Twitter bio, threatened a lady spokespers­on of the Congress and tweeted: “I want to rape your daughter. Send your daughter to me.” I was shocked when I read this. How can somebody who calls himself a devotee of Ram, write or even harbour such shameful thoughts? Ram is a symbol of dignity in Indian culture. Anybody who carries out such a threat on Twitter hasn’t just betrayed Ram but is also a coward. As soon as the Mumbai police registered a case against him, he closed his account and disappeare­d. The man has since been arrested. But the question is, do these irresponsi­ble individual­s realise the extent of disservice they are doing to the country’s image?

It isn’t that the targets of these miscreants are limited to politician­s in the Opposition. External affairs minister Sushma Swaraj was also in their cross-hairs. In the case relating to Lucknow’s Tanvi and Anas, while replying to a tweet, the kind of humiliatio­n that trolls heaped on her is something even her enemies won’t agree with. Swaraj has always acted with dignity in her political journey. Such vicious attacks on her can evoke feelings of dismay and shock. The unfettered flow of such impure thoughts is like a rainwater drain that cannot discern the difference between good and bad.

The consequenc­es of such actions can be enormously destructiv­e. One example of this is the violence that is being unleashed in different corners of the country. Twenty two people have lost their lives owing to rumours in the last two months. Consider this frightenin­g example. Two nature lovers were roaming in the forests of Assam trying to record the birdsongs. Suddenly a mob encircled them and began assaulting the two. The group of people kept addressing them as child-lifters. They clarified and pleaded showing them their addresses. But the mob kept assaulting the two till they died. One of the victims to meet an untimely death was an engineer with great promise. Incidental­ly, hundreds of kilometres away, a similar dance of death was being enacted in Aurangabad, Maharashtr­a. At both the places, the reason for the bloodshed was the same: rumours of child-lifting. In the name of the safety and well-being of one’s own children, how can one kill the children of others or turn their loved ones into orphans? The cycle of rumours and murders didn’t stop here. Just the names of the victims, the locations and the nature of rumours kept changing. This is the scourge of social media.

Looking at the grim situation, the Supreme Court was compelled to make strong remarks against state government­s. The ministry of home affairs also tightened the screws on the states. Law and justice minister Ravi Shankar Prasad turned the heat on social media corporatio­ns as well. The managers at Twitter said they would adopt a zerotolera­nce policy against trolling, abuse, fake news and spam on the social media platform. To begin with, one crore such accounts have been shut down as on May, 2018. This is an increase of 214% over last year. The company spokespers­on claims 30 significan­t changes have been carried out. As a result, close to 50,000 fake accounts are being detected every day. The findings are shocking, but they also tell us how we are becoming victims of the peddlers of deceptive ideas. The time has come for citizens who use social media not to react to anything they see, hear or read before verifying the facts. Your common sense can save someone’s life, prevent a woman’s dignity and play a role in protecting a nation’s reputation.

So, don’t delay this any longer. There is no point in keeping quiet and leaving this battle to the government. You and I will have to take the initiative, since the victims of these perpetrato­rs are people like us.

 ??  ?? S Bhosale mourns the death of her family in a mob attack, Dhule, July 2 SATISH BATE/HT
S Bhosale mourns the death of her family in a mob attack, Dhule, July 2 SATISH BATE/HT
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