This piece was published on the op-ed page of the New Indian Express on 24.07.2018 under the title: "Whatsapp doesn't kill, hate does."
It is now more or
less official: 35 killings or mob lynchings have taken place in the year since
May 2017. The trigger has been either alleged cattle smuggling or child
lifting, the victims generally of minority communities or “outsiders”. They
have been conveniently branded as “ What’s App killings” and the government has
issued a stern warning to What’s App to clean up its act. The can- and the
blame- has been conveniently kicked down the road to 2019. But here are some
inconvenient questions: What’s App has some 1.50 billion subscribers globally,
of which 200 million or 15% are in India; why is it that all the killings are
happening in India only ? Second, the messaging App has been in this country
since 2009: why is it that the mob murders have started only now, in the last
couple of years? What has changed so drastically in this period as to justify,
finally, Nirad Choudhry’s diagnosis that this is the continent of Circe, which
turns men into monsters ?
It is the changing
and deteriorating nature of politics which is primarily responsible for the
spurt in vigilantism, not the messaging App. The old culprits remain- shoddy
policing, a defunct justice system, social fault lines, an imperfect
technological platform that assures anonymity- but these are now a
supplementary emboldening factor, not the primary causative impetus. The latter
is provided by the newly created eco system of hate and fear whose holy grail
is the vote, which has to be grabbed no matter the cost to an individual or the
society. The credo of Satan prevails: it is far better to reign in Hell than to
serve in Heaven.
There is no shying
away from it, and it must be said: politicians- overwhelmingly those from the
ruling party at the centre, but also from other parties- are sowing the seeds
of vigilante violence by their acts and deeds and creating the fertile soil in
which they can grow their deadly crops, hoping to harvest them at election
time. People will believe what they are conditioned to believe, and if it is
drilled into them day in and day out that certain communities are not to be
trusted, that cow killers are on the loose, that liberals and intellectuals are
anti- national, that all Kashmiris are secessionists, that Universities are the
breeding ground of traitors, that conversions and “ love jihad” are decimating
the Hindu numbers, and worse, they will believe it all. What’s App is only the
messenger, the message itself comes from elsewhere in the corridors of power,
amplified by some channels which have specialised in converting news into “
fake views”. And very soon hate becomes a badge of honour, bravery and pride.
The malady has gone way beyond fake news now, it has metastasised into
vigilantism, a natural progression, according to Voltaire: “ Those who can make
you believe absurdities can also make you commit atrocities.”
The government will
of course not accept this thesis, but consider: what other message did a Union
Minister send when he honoured one of the accused killers of Akhlaq and draped
the national flag over his body ( he had died in prison)? What message did the
BJP MP from Jharkhand send when he announced that he would pay the legal
expenses of those accused in the mob killing of four people on suspicion of
cattle lifting? What was Civil Aviation Minister, Mr. Jayant Sinha- he of the
superficial and deceptive veneer of Harvard and McKinsey- conveying earlier
this month when he garlanded and felicitated the eight accused in another mob
lynching case? Or when Mr. Giriraj Singh, unfortunately another Minister who is
a serial offender in such matters, visited a bunch of riot accused in jail in Bihar
to offer them his help? Such incendiary and inappropriate behaviour would have
led to their sacking in any country where political decency exists, but here
there has not been one word of disapproval, let alone admonition, from any
party or government leader.
This is not just
about hate speech, it’s about a hate ecology that is replacing our tolerant
anarchy with inspired mob violence. Many years ago Dr. Ambedkar had noted that
“ democracy in India is only a top-dressing of the Indian soil which is essentially
undemocratic.” Even this fragile top soil is now being blown away by a devil’s
wind. When the sub conscious of the individual is seeded with caste and
communal hatred Freud’s theory comes into play- in a mob this altered sub
conscious gets unlocked and unfettered violence results. It helps when the
powers that be approve of this vigilantism, and a rotten justice system
promises that no one will actually get punished after the dust has dissipated.
So let us not pin
the entire blame on What’s App. Yes, it can do much more to remove anonymity
and delete accounts. But it is not responsible for the viciousness that
permeates our public and political discourse, the imploding of moral values in
our society; it cannot be blamed for the messaging that comes from our
political leaders and their sycophantic channels that magnify the hatred and
antagonism every day on prime time. That is something our shrinking civil
society will have to deal with. The problem is not technological as Mr. Ravi
Shankar Prasad seems to think, it’s behavioural and intellectual. After all, if
you deliberately issue a license to kill, why blame the gun ?
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