- Authorities in northeastern India have cut Internet access after crazed mobs beat three people to death in lynchings sparked by rumors spread on smartphones.
- They were the latest in a string of more than 25 similar killings in recent months across India that have been ignited by false information spread on messaging service WhatsApp.
NEW DELHI: Authorities in northeastern India have cut Internet access after crazed mobs beat three people to death in lynchings sparked by rumors spread on smartphones, officials said Friday.
They were the latest in a string of more than 25 similar killings in recent months across India, according to press reports, that have been ignited by false information spread on messaging service WhatsApp.
“The administration has decided to cut off the Internet and mobile messaging services for next 48 hours... to stop rumor mongering,” said Smriti Ranjan Das, a police spokesman in the tribal-dominated state of Tripura.
The latest victims, one of whom was tasked by authorities with warning people against hoaxes, perished in three separate incidents on Thursday in Tripura.
Locals in Sabroom, some 130 kilometers (80 miles) from the state capital Agartala, attacked “rumor buster” Sukanta Chakraborty with sticks and bricks as he was warning people on a megaphone against erroneous rumors.
Tripura police said it was unclear what sparked the attack.
Das told AFP that the man died on the spot and that his driver was injured in a frenzied attack that lasted nearly an hour.
“It was a sudden and vicious attack and they didn’t get time to escape. Our teams reached on the spot and could only rescue the driver,” the police spokesman said.
Hours before in West Tripura district, a nearly 1,000-strong mob attacked four traders from northern Uttar Pradesh state, killing one and leaving the others critically injured.
The four took refuge inside a paramilitary camp after hundreds of people believing them to be child kidnappers chased their vehicle after they stopped for a tea break on a road.
But the mob entered the base and dragged all four from the car, attacking them with sticks and rods as soldiers unsuccessfully tried to break up the crowd by firing warning shots.
No arrests have been made in the cases but authorities said they were questioning several suspects.
State chief minister Biplab Deb in a tweet warned of strict action against people indulging in spreading rumors and fake news.