Vijayan orders probe into cyberbullying of student
Kerala chief minister Pinarayi Vijayan on Friday ordered a probe into cyberbullying of a woman college student in Kochi who sells fish for a living after college hours.
The student, Hanan Hamid , 21, was targeted by trolls who said she was putting on an act. Hamid took them on with a “why me” retort.
Vijayan directed the Ernakulam district collector to provide help to Hamid and the Kochi Corporation promised to give her a kiosk to vend fish . Vijayan said her endeavour to support her family and pursue her studies at the same time was a matter of pride. “I have asked the Ernakulam collector to provide protection and I request the state to stand with the gutsy girl,” he wrote on his Facebook post.
Minister of state for tourism KJ Alphons also commended Hamid and came down hard on the trolls. “Kerala sharks stop attacking #Hanan. I am ashamed. Here is a girl trying to put together a shattered life. You vultures!,” he wrote in a Facebook post. Film-maker Arun Gopi has offered her a role in his upcoming film.
Hamid was in the limelight recently after a Malayalam daily carried a report depicting her struggle to come up in life. Although the story was an instant hit, some sections couldn’t digest it and began a virulent campaign that it had been
THIRUVANANTHAPURAM: I have asked the Ernakulam collector to provide protection and I request the state to stand with the gutsy girl
PINARAYI VIJAYAN, Kerala chief minister, in a Facebook post Kerala sharks stop attacking #Hanan. I am ashamed. Here is a girl trying to put together a shattered life. You vultures! KJ ALPHONS, Union tourism minister, in a Facebook post
cooked up and that “she was acting in real life for reel roles.” How can a jeans-clad woman sell fish, they asked, and cited the bit roles she played in some Malayalam movies.
Some others too found fault with the way she dressed, and warned her not to identify herself as a Muslim.
When the attacks mounted, she broke down before the media, saying he had been struggling to come up in life since she was a child and had never hankered for cheap publicity or help. “I don’t know why I was targeted like this,” she said, adding that she had also sold flowers and played bit roles in moves and was now vending fish for a living.Her father, an alcoholic, left the family when she was young and her mother has been suffering mental ailments.
State women’s commission chairperson M C Josephine has directed the cyber cell to book her tormentors immediately. “Our society has to change a lot. Sad, people are concerned with her dress, not her struggle,” she said.
A final-year undergraduate student in a private college, Hamid told a TV channel that her day starts at 3 am.
After an hour of study, she cycles from her rented house to the wholesale fish market that is 4km away.
After buying fish, she stores them at a friend’s place and goes to college. After her classes, she said, she comes back to the market to sell the fish she bought in the morning and earns ₹500 to 700 daily.