Khaleej Times

Who’s To blAme foR spATe of RumouR-TRIggeReD mob KIllIngs?

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NEW DELHI — India has been shaken by a spate of mob killings sparked by a hoax about child kidnappers spread on WhatsApp.

In just two months, 20 people have been murdered in such attacks. Officials and social media platforms have so far been powerless to stop the violence. But who is to blame? And why is a rumour turning people to violence?

An online hoax emerged more than a year ago in eastern India claiming strangers were sedating and abducting children. Six men falsely accused of snatching kids off the streets were killed by mobs in Jharkhand state, police said.

In February this year, the rumours resurfaced nearly a thousand miles away in western India. By May, it had reached the country’s southern states, often accompanie­d by a grainy video purporting to show men on motorbikes stealing kids.

This falsehood spread like wildfire via WhatsApp, which boasts 200 million users in India who send a billion messages a day.

Later, a grisly video claiming to show Indian children killed by organ-harvesting gangs went viral. The macabre images were Syrian infants killed in a gas attack five years ago. Translated into regional languages, the rumour triggered violence across India, particular­ly in rural areas where distrust of outsiders is entrenched and digital literacy is poor.

By early July, at least 20 people had been killed in the previous two months. Among the victims were homeless people, two picnic goers and an elderly woman handing out chocolates to children.

India’s police rounded up suspects and formed patrols, driving village to village to quash the rumours. In some areas, travelling musicians sung about the scourge of fake news.

Authoritie­s in some states shut down internet access in a desperate bid to stop the hoax from spreading. But the awareness campaigns had limited effect. In one instance, an official “rumour buster” was himself beaten to death.

Anger turned to WhatsApp, blamed by authoritie­s for spread- ing “irresponsi­ble and explosive messages”.

WhatsApp said it was “horrified” by the violence and assured Indian authoritie­s it was taking action.

The Facebook-owned company said it was working with Indian researcher­s to better understand the problem and had introduced changes which it said would reduce the spread of such messages.

But some pointed out that WhatsApp as a medium was not to blame, and urged the authoritie­s to tackle the violence.

India is no stranger to mob violence, with well-documented cases of crowds turning on victims for every manner of transgress­ion, real or imagined.

In recent years, for example, there has been a sharp escalation in “cow vigilantis­m” — Hindu extremists murdering Muslims and thrashing low-caste Dalits accused of killing cows or eating beef.

Many of the victims in other vigilante killings, such as those over child kidnapping rumours, are targeted because they are outsiders. —

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