Twitter accused of censoring Indian critic of Hindu nationalism
 
 
Twitter has been accused of censoring the prominent
Indian journalist Salil Tripathi by suspending his account, after he tweeted on
subjects including the anniversary of the demolition of the Babri mosque and
his work on India’s shrinking democratic space.
Writers including Salman Rushdie and Amitav Ghosh
expressed anger after Tripathi, who is chair of PEN International’s Writers in
Prison Committee, had his Twitter account suspended on Sunday without warning.
A rightwing Hindu nationalist group called Deshi
Army, which has 26,000 followers on Twitter, claimed victory after the
suspension. Deshi Army was recently praised online by Kapil Mishra, a hardline
leader from India’s ruling Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata party (BJP), who
said: “This team is doing amazing work” in targeting critics of the government
online.
Tripathi, who was born in Mumbai but lives in New
York, is a writer for various publications and a contributing editor for the
Indian publications Mint and the Caravan, and often critiques Hindu
nationalism. He has written a book about its implications for freedom of
expression in India and most recently wrote a piece for Foreign Policy magazine
titled Why India has Become a Different Country, about the erosion of democracy
under the BJP government.
Sunday was the anniversary of the demolition of the
Babri mosque, a Muslim mosque that was torn to the ground by a Hindu
nationalist mob in 1992. Tripathi posted a video on Twitter of him reading his
own poem which addressed the demolition, Indian independence and the 2002
religious riots in Gujarat, where upwards of 1000 people, mainly Muslims, were
killed.
His account was suspended shortly afterwards. A
statement from Twitter said Tripathi’s account “has been temporarily suspended
for publishing a list that violates our abusive behaviour policy”.
Speaking to the Guardian, Tripathi said: “Twitter’s
decision-making has been opaque and arbitrary. Twitter is a private space which
creates the illusion of being a public space, which it clearly is not, and
takes decisions on free speech and human rights that it does not have the
mandate, expertise, or capacity for.”
Some of India’s most well-known writers, lawyers and
journalists expressed outrage at his suspension. Rushdie tweeted:
Ghosh wrote that he was “beyond astonished to learn
that Salil Tripathi’s Twitter account has been suspended. Salil is an
outstanding journalist, writer and human rights activist.”
The writer Nilanjana Roy tweeted: “Why has Salil
Tripathi’s Twitter account been suspended? Earlier today, he’d tweeted about
the demolition of the Babri Masjid, expressing the continuing anguish many also
feel – hope Twitter India will restore his voice soonest.” Suketu Mehta, also
an author, said Tripathi was “one of our most important human rights activists.
Absolutely unacceptable for Twitter India to suspend
his account. India needs Salil’s voice!”
Shashi Tharoor, a politician for the opposition
Congress party, also expressed concern. “I can’t believe this,” he wrote. “How
on earth could Twitter suspend the account of a highly respected writer, author
and human rights activist? Do their algorithms have no human being applying
common sense before undertaking such actions?”
Tripathi emphasised the intimidation and harassment
now faced by journalists working in India under the BJP government. “Many more
journalists and writers have endured far worse than what I am experiencing at
the moment,” he said. “They are the real heroes.”
 
          
     
                                
 
 


