Growing Social Media usage in India has only triggered a change - a change that at least with the recent events only seems positive
A few days back, a text message on the phone: “Video of brutal killings of two boys is of Pakistan, and not related to the Muzaffarnagar incident. Refrain from sharing or else criminal action will be taken.”
A few days back, a text message on the phone: “Video of brutal killings of two boys is of Pakistan, and not related to the Muzaffarnagar incident. Refrain from sharing or else criminal action will be taken.”
The sign off on the
message said it was from the office of the DGP, UP Police (the highest-ranking
police officer in the state of Uttar Pradesh). Muzaffarnagar, a town in the
northern Indian state, recently witnessed communal violence in which 45 people
died (according to the official death toll). A YouTube video, which officials
sources are saying was either shot in Pakistan or Afghanistan, and uploaded on
YouTube two years ago was circulated online, with some saying it was shot
during the violence in Muzaffarnagar. Police claim the video incited greater
violence, and are probing how it went viral.
The incident is
another key demonstration of the role of social media in shaping events, politics
and opinion in India – sometimes unwittingly. But even more, there is a sense
in India that social media can positively shape politics, reform mind sets, and
bring about change.
For example, a few
months back a photograph of two young men making lewd gestures to female
commuters in Bangalore were photographed by a male friend who was with the
women. The young man uploaded the picture on the Facebook page of the Bangalore
Police, and within days the post attracted thousands of likes and comments. It certainly
got the attention of the Bangalore Police, who arrested the two men, and
brought them in for interrogation.
That might seem like
an isolated incident, but over the past few months mainstream, prime-time
broadcast news programs seem to be heavily influenced by the conversations
taking place on social media. Maybe this particular trend points to lazy
journalism, but it also brings an issue into the mainstream. Namely, can a
growing number of educated people who are getting online and lighting up the
Twitter sphere herald more passionate debates? Can this growing collective voice
force issues of development and social change into the national gaze?
In
March 2013, a report by the Internet and Mobile Association of India (IAMAI)
and Indian Market Research Bureau (IMRB) found that the number of social media
users in urban India would reach 66 million by this June. The report also said
that 74 percent of all active internet users in India use social media. This figure – which grew more than 30
percent from 56.3 million users in the previous year – makes India the world’s
third-largest internet population.
Preeti Singh, editor of Igovernment.in, a
website focussed on governance issues, doesn’t share this optimism. She tells
The Diplomat, “How many people in India are on social media, in any case? Not
enough people are on it to have reached inflexion, even now. Worse, I strongly
believe that most people on social media don’t really want to make a
difference, they just want to sound smart.”
She admits it’s a good medium to sensitize
people to issues they otherwise might now be aware of. And of course, this can
help trigger reform. But it’s important not to expect more from the medium than
is reasonable. As Malcolm Gladwell wrote in The New Yorker a few years back,
“The revolution will not be tweeted.”
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