Photo: Akshar Dave / Unsplash
Photo: Akshar Dave / Unsplash

Too keen to withhold?

Why we know so little about the temporary blocking of the Twitter accounts covering farmers’ protests.

Chhetria Patrakar is Himal's roving media critic.

Published on

Why should the temporary blocking of a handful of Twitter accounts grab national headlines when a country is seeing mass protests near the capital, and its national budget is just out? In India, the answer probably lies in how easily the online platform caved in to the government's demands to withhold accounts critical of the government.

On 1 February 2020, a number of Twitter accounts were withheld in India – rendering their tweets inaccessible to Indians (unless they changed their device geolocation by using a VPN service). The accounts that were withheld included that of the Delhi-based magazine The Caravan, actor Sushant Singh, activists Md Asif Khan and Hansraj Meena, CEO of Prasar Bharati Shashi Shekhar Vempati, member of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) Mohammed Salim and national executive member of the Aam Aadmi party Preeti Sharma Menon. All of them had one thing in common: they had tweeted about the ongoing farmers' protests against the new agricultural laws. Some of the accounts suspended (such as that of Kisan Ekta Morcha) were devoted to tweeting updates from the protests themselves.

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