India orders takedowns of social media posts it claims harm fight against raging COVID-19 outbreak

As India battles a surging second wave of COVID-19 cases and severe shortages of medical supplies to fight it, the nation’s government has told Facebook, Instagram and Twitter to remove social media posts it says may panic its populace with misinformation.

The takedown requests were lodged on Friday, a day before India for the first time recorded over 300,000 new COVID-19 cases. India’s previous peak came in September 2020, when cases reached nearly 100,000 cases a day before settling to around 10,000 a day in early 2021.

The situation is now very grim. On Sunday, India’s Ministry of Health and Family Welfare reported over 2.6 million active cases of COVID-19, and 2,767 deaths in the previous 24 hours.

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Case numbers and deaths are suspected to be underreported as crematoria report more activity than reported deaths in a country where accuracy of mortality data is far from guaranteed.

The new wave is so severe that hospitals have run short of oxygen and beds, so many Indians have taken to Twitter to ask strangers for help.

Alongside the pleas for help, some Indians have criticised Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s response, highlighting the lack of a nation-wide lockdown and the Prime Minister’s appearances at political rallies alongside throngs of supporters.

Some posts made by those critical of the Prime Minister – including some from opposition politicians – have made the takedown list. Twitter disclosed the emergency order it received from the government to remove 21 tweets on Lumen Database.

Among the banned Tweets are the following by opposition MP Revanth Reddy.

For now the social media companies have agreed to take down listed posts for Indian users. Posts remain visible outside of India.

Reddy responded as fdollows:

India’s Internet Freedom Foundation had this to say:

This is not the first time India has come under fire for censoring the internet. The nation’s new “Information Technology (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules 2021” has come under fire for breaking encryption and stymieing free speech. In the past the government has disabled 4G and wired internet services for some states, asked Twitter to issue fairly large bans, and filed charges against Amazon Prime India’s head of content over scenes in a TV program deemed to be offensive. ®

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