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The Union Home Ministry on Tuesday, 3 July, asked the Mumbai Police to register a case against a Twitter user in connection with a rape threat to Congress spokesperson Priyanka Chaturvedi, and take legal action against the guilty.
The ministry also asked Twitter India to furnish details of the account which threatened Chaturvedi.
"On the issue of threats received via Twitter by Congress spokesperson Priyanka Chaturvedi, Union Ministry of Home Affairs has asked the Mumbai Police to register a case, identify the person and take legal action. The MHA has also asked Twitter to furnish details of the account," a ministry spokesperson said.
A fake quote attributed to Congress spokesperson Priyanka Chaturvedi supporting Mandsaur rapist Irfan was circulated on social media by Twitter handle @GirishK1605. The tweet has now been deleted, but not before spreading fake news and calling for the rape of Chaturvedi’s daughter.
“Priyanka I want to rape your daughter. Send your daughter to me,” was the tweet by @GirishK1605.
Soon after, Chaturvedi herself was subjected to threats on social media in utmost vile language.
@GirishK1605 operated his Twitter handle by the name of ‘Jay Sri Ram’. Calling out the irony of using God’s name to spew hate, the Congress spokesperson tweeted to Mumbai Police, who informed her that action has been initiated.
Sexual abuse faced by Chaturvedi followed the recent threats received by journalist Ravish Kumar and his family over a fake quote attributed to him. According to the posts circulated on social media, Kumar called the rape of 11-year old Gita (name changed) in Ghazipur as consensual sex.
Owing to the widespread circulation of the fake quote through right-wing pages and abuses that followed, Kumar had to clarify on Facebook that he did not make any such statement.
In a show aired by his channel NDTV on 25 May, Kumar said that his phone rang day and night with abusive calls and messages targeting both him and his family members.
Earlier this year, journalist Rana Ayyub also found herself in the crosshairs of abusive trolls over a fake quote that claimed she was supporting rapists, stating that Muslims were in danger. The quote was from a parody account of Republic TV and was later taken down.
The United Nations human rights experts released a statement calling the Indian government to “urgently protect” her in the wake of death/rape threats. A morphed pornographic video of Ayyub was also doing rounds on social media and she began receiving phone calls and messages soliciting sexual favours from her.
Another fake quote is currently circulating online, claiming that journalist Rajdeep Sardesai said that the Mandsaur rape is an attempt to malign Muslims. One quick scroll through the comments tells us the number of people who believe the quote to be true and have, thus, resorted to abusing Sardesai.
Attributing fake quotes to public personalities is a common method of inciting hate and fuelling biases on social media. In case of women, the abuses and threats are often sexual in nature.
The easiest method to find out the truth is to check official accounts of public personalities on social media and/or look for credible sources in the media to verify if they have made the purported comment or not.
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(The story first published on Alt News and has been republished with permission. The article has been edited for length)
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