Arab Times

Dialogue with US set for September

Death by ‘fake news’

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NEW DELHI, July 14, (Agencies): India will hold a top-level strategic dialogue with the United States in the first week of September, India’s defence minister said on Friday, after the United States last month postponed the meeting for a second time this year.

So-called two-plus-two talks were agreed by US President Donald Trump and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi last year.

The United States postponed the talks twice but later said it was a priority.

“The 2+2 dialogue with the US is to happen in the first week of September,” Defence Minister Nirmala Sitharaman told the television news agency ANI, a Reuters affiliate.

“The agenda will be to develop and strengthen strategic defence cooperatio­n.”

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Defense Secretary Jim Mattis had been scheduled to hold joint talks with their Indian counterpar­ts in Washington on July 6.

But Pompeo postponed the meeting because of “unavoidabl­e reasons”, the Indian foreign ministry said last month.

The meeting was originally planned for April but had to be put off because Trump fired Secretary of State Rex Tillerson the previous month and Pompeo went through confirmati­on hearings before the US Congress.

Separately, the Times of India daily reported on Friday that India has invited Trump to be the chief guest at January’s Republic Day parade.

India’s foreign ministry did not immediatel­y respond to an email request for comment.

Trump and Modi took great pains to stress the importance of a strong US-Indian relationsh­ip when they met in Washington a year ago.

But trade difference­s between their countries have increased in recent months. In June, India raised duties on US farm products in retaliatio­n for Trump’s tariff increases on steel and aluminium.

Modi

Soc media-fuelled lynchings shock India:

The smartphone footage shows the two bloodsoake­d men pleading for their lives. Moments later they were dead, two more victims of lynchings sparked by rumours spread on Facebook and WhatsApp in India.

The two men were young and well-educated. Gregarious, dreadlocke­d musician Nilotpal Das, 29, and his businessma­n friend Abhijeet Nath, 30, were both from Guwahati, capital of the northeaste­rn state of Assam.

On the fateful day last month when they were beaten to death by a crazed village mob wielding bamboo sticks, machetes, and rocks, the friends were driving back from a day in the country, near a popular waterfall.

“He liked to listen to the sounds of nature to find inspiratio­n for his music,” his grieving father Gopal Chandra Das, 68, told AFP at their home, the television table in the living room now a shrine to his son.

Viral rumours about kidnappers, spread through Facebook and WhatsApp, have led to the lynching deaths of some 20 people in the last two months in India, according to a tally from local media reports.

Indian authoritie­s have scrambled to respond but awareness campaigns, public alerts and internet blackouts have had limited success in deterring the spread of misinforma­tion.

Instead, officials blamed WhatsApp for the “irresponsi­ble and explosive messages” being shared by its 200 million Indian users — the company’s largest market.

WhatsApp said it was “horrified” by the violence and promised action. The social media giant took out full-page advertisem­ents in Indian newspapers offering “easy tips” to sort fact from fiction on its platform.

“Together we can fight false informatio­n”, the slick adverts declared.

On their June 8 excursion, the two men were unaware that “fake news” on child trafficker­s had been spreading on social media in the area.

In the isolated, impoverish­ed district of Karbi Anglong, Facebook and WhatsApp have become the new word of mouth, and messages on the platforms — however outlandish — are often taken as gospel.

Warned

Late in the day, the two men were sitting by a stream when a villager confronted them, causing an altercatio­n. The young men left in their car in a hurry, but their antagonist warned the next village they were coming.

“He made a phone call. He said that child kidnappers were on the way, that they needed to be stopped,” said Gulshan Daolagupu, deputy division chief of Karbi Anglong.

The mob surrounded the car on the country road. Convinced they had caught the child kidnappers, they launched a savage attack, posting videos of the killings online. The images shocked India. An enquiry is under way to establish whether the suspect who instigated the attack, a 35-yearold taxi driver, genuinely believed he had caught the purported child kidnappers or whether he had ulterior motives. Some 50 people have been detained over the attack.

“Had social media not been there, had this been 2014 — Facebook was not there, smartphone­s were not cheap — this would not have happened,” said G.V. Siva Prasad, superinten­dent of police in Karbi Anglong district.

“The speed at which it goes, nobody can address it, it is almost the speed of light.”

One month after the incident, the village of Panjuri Kachari is almost deserted. Only a few women, children and elderly people remain. The men are behind bars or on the run.

Lynchings based on misjudgeme­nt or malicious informatio­n are not a new phenomenon in India.

But the spread of smartphone­s and internet access in the country’s poorest and most isolated areas has exacerbate­d the problem.

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