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regular-article-logo Monday, 23 December 2024

BJP smells danger after Twitter suspends Trump’s account

‘If they can do this to the President of the US, they can do this to anyone’

Our Bureau, Agencies New Delhi Published 09.01.21, 08:28 PM
Twitter on Friday had permanently suspended Donald Trump's account due to the risk of further incitement of violence.

Twitter on Friday had permanently suspended Donald Trump's account due to the risk of further incitement of violence. Telegraph Picture

Following Twitter’s move of permanently suspending US President Donald Trump’s account, BJP leaders on Saturday expressed concerns over it, dubbing it as a “dangerous precedent”. They said it is a wake-up call for democracies about the threat from unregulated big tech companies.

Twitter has permanently suspended Trump’s account citing a “risk of further incitement of violence”, days after his supporters stormed the US Capitol that resulted in the death of five so far.

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“If they can do this to the President of the US (POTUS), they can do this to anyone. Sooner India reviews intermediaries’ regulations, better for our democracy,” BJP Youth Wing president Tejaswi Surya said in a tweet.

He said the suspension of Trump’s account is a wake-up call for those who do not yet understand the threat to democracies from unregulated big tech companies.

Echoing similar sentiments, BJP’s IT cell head Amit Malviya said, “Deplatforming Donald Trump, a sitting US president, sets a dangerous precedent. It has less to do with his views and more to do with intolerance for a differing point.”

He said those who claim to champion free speech are celebrating and dubbed big tech firms as “new oligarchs”.

Pitching for regulating such firms, Surya said dissent is fundamental to democracy and the government welcomes it, but only constitutional authorities can decide on its reasonability. Lately, big tech companies have themselves assumed this role, he said, adding, “Time for us to regulate big tech companies.”

Surya, who is also a member of the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Information Technology, said Facebook and Twitter serve as platforms for expression and they should not curtail people’s will.

In a statement on Friday, Twitter said after a close review of recent tweets from the @realDonaldTrump account and the context around those -- specifically how those are being received and interpreted on and off the social media platform -- the account has been permanently suspended due to the risk of further incitement of violence.

At the time of the permanent suspension, Trump had 88.7 million followers and followed 51 people.

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