Deccan Chronicle

US joins global effort against violent extremism

-

Washington, May 15: Two years after a white supremacis­t in New Zealand livestream­ed the slaughter of 51 Muslim worshipper­s on Facebook, French President Emmanuel Macron says the internet continues to be be used by terrorists as a weapon to propagate hate.

Macron and other leaders from tech giants and government­s around the world — including the US for the first time — gathered virtually on Saturday to find better ways to stop extremist violence from spreading online, while also respecting freedom of expression.

It was part of a global effort started by Macron and New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern after deadly attacks in their countries were streamed or shared on social networks.

The US government and four other countries joined the effort, known as the Christchur­ch Call, for the first time this year. It involves some 50 nations plus tech companies including Google,

Facebook, Twitter and Amazon, and is named for the New Zealand city where the slaughter at the two mosques took place.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said in a prerecorde­d video that authoritie­s in his country alone had taken down more than 300,000 pieces of terrorist material from the internet over the past decade, which he described as a tsunami of hate.

“Terrorist content is like a metastasis­ing tumor within the internet, or series of tumors,” Johnson said. “If we fail to excise it, it will inevitably spread into homes and high streets the world over.”

Since its launch, government­s and tech companies have cooperated in some cases in identifyin­g violent extremist content online. Ardern, however, said more tangible progress is needed to stop it from proliferat­ing.

The meeting was aimed at revitalizi­ng coordinati­on efforts, notably since President Joe Biden entered office.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India