Parent firm worked on honour killings: Whistle-blower
The parent company of controversial political consultancy firm Cambridge Analytica was not only closely involved in Indian elections since 2003, it also worked on a project to assess the incidence of honour killings in the country.
A cache of documents submitted by Cambridge Analytica whistle-blower Christopher Wylie to UK’s parliamentary committee on digital, culture, media and sport, published on Thursday, includes texts of agreements that Strategic Communications Limited signed for polls in the US and elsewhere.
The cache includes a document on its involvement in Indian elections that was tweeted by Wylie on Wednesday, but it also has details on issues such as “Comprehensive research, followed by a targeted intervention, radically changed voter behaviour in Thailand”, and “Covert sponsorship of peaceful rallies in Indonesia prevented disorder and ensured a smooth transition to civilian rule”.
The documents date back to 2013, 2014 and earlier and lay bare the forensic ways in which voter behaviour was sought to be influenced in political processes in several countries. The committee will continue its investigation into CA with more hearings.
SCL states in one of the documents that it completed a project on “honour killings and cultural change” in Punjab, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh and Rajasthan between 2009 and 2010.
It states: “Despite numerous legal instruments and policy pronouncements the custom of honour killing remains an issue in India...At the level of enforcement, local police and magistrates are often sympathetic to the practice of killing.
“This has made systematic
enforcement of the law somewhat problematic. SCL helped its client to better understand the often convoluted and secretive culture surrounding honour killings.
“SCL examined the cultural and social systems that gave rise to killings, including the sociocultural understandings of honour that drove the murders. SCL analysed the issue via problem space mapping and on that foundation proposed a number of interventions to stop honour killings taking place.” HTC