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Show me one byte of NE students saying panic was caused by internet | Firstpost
One really has to wonder where the internet penetration is so low, people of villages would be affected by a few threads on social media.
North-East exodus: Politicians, not Pakistan, made it worse | Firstpost
The Indian government has blocked more than 250 websites blaming them for uploading morphed images and causing panic and leading to the exodus of north-east citizens. According to blogger and activist Shivam Vij this ban is just another kind of bullying in cyberspace.
There is general bullying that the government is been doing to intermediaries to do their own censorship, Shivam Vij told CNN-IBN.
It is not just bullying but also shifting the blame on who is not to be blamed, he added.
Vij also said that till now there is no proof that the exodus of the north-east citizens was caused due to some content on the website.
Can you show me one byte or clip of a North-east student saying that the panic was cause by the internet? Vij questioned.
Such kind of censorship by the Indian government is not new and the government usually does it to hide its incompetence, Vij said.
A lot of heinous censorship is already happening on the internet done by the Government of India for years now, nothing new about that, which they use to cover their incompetence, he said.
One really has to wonder where the internet penetration is so low, people of villages would be affected by a few threads on social media.
North-East exodus: Politicians, not Pakistan, made it worse | Firstpost
Bulk of the rumours that triggered panic among people of northeastern states in Karnataka, Tamil Nadu and Maharashtra were sourced from Pakistan, Union Home Secretary R K Singh said.
A total of 76 websites were identified where morphed images were uploaded and bulk of these were uploaded in Pakistan, Singh told PTI, Firstpost had reported.
Here we go again, blaming Pakistan for the newest problem on the block.
Perhaps RK Singh is correct and that the bulk of the rumours originated in Pakistan.
What Singh, the home minister, the prime minister and the political classes in India (all of them) should spend time on is why it was so easy for citizens of the North-eastern states to believe in the rumours.
Tomorrow, it could be a rumour of north Indians being targeted in Mumbai, Marwaris being targeted in Assam, Tamilians being targeted in Karnataka and Kerala, Malayalees being targeted in Tamil Nadu, upper castes being targeted in UP, Dalits being targeted in Bihar, and so on.
All these possible rumours, wherever they might originate, will be easy to believe.
They would be easy to believe because, over the decades, all political parties have looked the other way when one section of society has targeted another because such events suit their political ends. If, over history, the state machinery had cracked down on the offenders (even in the pre-mobile telephony and pre-Internet days), citizens who now hear of such rumours would have felt confident that, even if the rumours held a semblance of truth in them, they would be protected.
What we see is the worst of vote bank politics every time something like this rises.
In the current exodus, the political parties went into a game of one-upmanship (the blame game on the illegal immigration from Bangladesh) before attending to the more pressing issue making those who were targeted feel safe across the country. Politics should have come later.
Yet, all political energies of the two principal parties in the country (currently) are focused on the possible political gains and losses that could accrue.
How does it matter who is responsible for the rumours? The rumours give politicians a new issue that, if used well, could harvest votes for one alignment of parties or another.
The tragedy in the current instance is that none of political parties involved the UPA government at the centre, the BJP government in Karnataka, the Congress government in Andhra Pradesh, the coalition government in Maharashtra and the various political parties in the north-eastern states have been able to convince the targeted citizens that they would be safe and looked after if they chose to stay in Bangalore, Hyderabad and Pune. The lack of confidence is telling and should be of concern to the political classes.
But the politicians are busy working out possible gains and losses in terms of votes and seats. And, as is their wont, they play the blame game and take solace in it.
This time, the centre finds that Pakistan is responsible. That attempts to get the Centre off the hook. By today, the various state governments will use Singhs statement to get themselves off the hook.
The very statement diverts the issue from why the exodus took place in the first place. The issue is not the rumour, and nor is it where the rumours originated.
The issue is why the victims could find the rumours so easy to believe and why statements by the politicians promising protection were so difficult to believe.