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As a journalist who has been in the industry for two decades now, it wasn’t uncommon for Vidyashree Dharmaraj to see comments of a few offended people on her news portal’s Facebook page.
Vidyashree is the editor-in-chief of The Covai Post, an online news portal which broke the story on Sunday about seven girls who had not attained puberty being paraded bare-chested at a temple festival in Vellalur, Madurai.
This procession is part of a yearly practice that involves the minors being 'offered' to the Yezhaikatha Amman temple for a fortnight. Sixty villages take part in this festival, reported Meyammai, The Covai Post’s executive editor.
“The initial comments were along the lines of ‘what the hell do you know about our festival?’ and ‘who did you get money from?’ There were 10-12 comments, all in Tamil, but not very abusive,” Vidyashree tells TNM.
Meanwhile, Meyammai also started getting a lot of friend requests on Facebook.
Things took a turn for the worse when Vidyashree started getting threatening messages on her phone on Monday, around 7pm. “The first message I received on WhatsApp was a screenshot of the office address, my name and my number. After that I got a couple of messages saying that now I would have to face a lot,” Vidyashree says.
She continued to receive similar WhatsApp messages that night. Not all of them were threatening, but most were.
VoIP or Voice over Internet Protocol is a technology which allows one to deliver voice communications via the internet.
The calls started around 10pm. “They were talking nicely initially, saying that we shouldn’t have covered the ritual the way we did. I tried to engage with a few of them, the ones that seemed to be from mobile numbers. But I missed a lot of them. The calls went on through the night. At some point I got bugged and switched off my phone,” Vidyashree says. Till the time her phone was on, she had received 50-55 calls.
“Other callers left threatening messages like, ‘what the hell does she know about our customs?’, ‘we will finish her’ and ‘ask her to be careful’,” Vidyashree adds.
The callers continued to bombard her personal number through Tuesday, prompting her to file a complaint with the Cyber-crime cell in Coimbatore city and also with the Madurai DIG. However, Vidyashree is skeptical about how much that will help seeing that all the messages and calls come via the internet, making them difficult to track.
With over 60 messages on WhatsApp, many of which are just voice messages, and 200 calls, the experience has left Vidyashree’s family very worried about her.
But there is no question of taking down the story, Meyammai says. “I was there, and I reported what I saw. It is a sensitive issue for it concerns religion and culture, but there is nothing untrue in what we have reported. It is all factual. We haven’t said that the children are being sexually abused, but we just do not want them to be exploited in any manner. The scope for that in such a setting has to be acknowledged,” she asserts.
(This story was originally published on The News Minute)
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