The Free Press Journal

INTERNET LOCKDOWNS ARE A BLOT ON INDIA

THE WRITER IS A FORMER CHIEF GENERAL MANAGER OF THE RESERVE BANK OF INDIA)

- GANGA NARAYAN RATH

The internet has become an inextricab­le part of life. The recent shutdown of the internet in various parts of India has generated a lot of debate. Most commentato­rs have criticised the shutdown, pilloried the police and raised issues relating to its desirabili­ty and legality. Reports of economic loss, myriad inconvenie­nces to people and the perceived threat to freedom of life and expression abound. This column principall­y discusses the alternativ­es to this step, which has earned India the sobriquet of being the ‘capital of internet shutdown’ in a relatively short span of time. According to a recent India Today study, India witnessed only six Internet shutdowns in 2014, which rose to 14 in 2015. In 2016, it more than doubled to 31, and in 2017, the number reached 79. It stood at its peak in 2018, clocking 134 instances of shutdowns, and by December 15, 2019, there were as many as 93 Internet shutdowns, impacting a total of 167 areas. The rise in these numbers is shocking and the implicatio­ns are not always fully understood.

First of all, shutting down the internet is a blunt instrument. By doing this, we are applying a 17th century solution to a 21st century problem. Today, if we look at the police force in India, it becomes obvious that the ability of our police force to investigat­e an event is constraine­d by skill deficit, near absence of required investment­s in equipment and technology, which can facilitate policing online and above all an inadequate understand­ing of the unintended consequenc­es of shutting down the internet. Second, social media has two sides, a side that can be destructiv­e and one that can be constructi­ve.

If the police gets to know of certain inflammato­ry messages doing the rounds on WhatsApp or any other platform, it has to demonstrat­e the ability to track down the chain and identify the originator. If the police is enabled technologi­cally and statutoril­y to find the perpetrato­r, there is a much lower chance they would resort to shutting down the internet. Once certain accounts have been identified as the source of rumours, hate or communal provocatio­n, the authoritie­s are well within their rights to request Facebook and Twitter to pull down specific posts or even shut down the accounts, instead of a general shutdown. Besides, the State has the authority to force such an ‘anonymous medium’ to either extend its help in decoding or risk being completely banned in a country or territory.

At the same time, a perpetrato­r has to be aware that he or she cannot, without any responsibi­lity, just send out incendiary messages and believe that the messages have vanished into the vast unknowable world of social media.

Besides, the ability to dig and determine the originator will have to be demonstrat­ed by the police again and again. Is there any justificat­ion on the part of the State to feel helpless vis-à-vis the social media and the news channels? None.

The police stations may have to be supported with local area apps and communicat­e with residentia­l associatio­ns of a particular region by circulatin­g a truthful descriptio­n of events, the presence of the police force in different localities, the expected hour of relaxation in prohibitor­y orders, availabili­ty of necessitie­s, date of reopening of schools and other institutio­ns, etc. This way, the police could become more acceptable to the silent majority, instead of letting vested interests misguide society in the absence of essential informatio­n. The French police more or less did the same thing during the terrorist attacks in November 2015.

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