Articles features
'We have a culture of not speaking up'
New Delhi, April 3
As a society we don't
nurture the opinion of young people and the culture of debating social
issues is completely missing, but the rise of social media has empowered
people to highlight issues that bother them, said a social media
activist.
"A number of people have voice today because of social
media. As a nation we don't have a culture of speaking up and hence we
never cared to provide a platform to the people, especially youngsters
to voice their opinion. But now things are changing," said Anshul
Tewari, founder and editor-in-chief of Youth Ki Awaaz, an online
platform for youth.
"There was a time when it was a matter of who
gets to speak up, but the rise of social media has changed the complete
dynamics of this idea and now it is a matter of who gets to be heard,"
he added.
Tewari was speaking at a session "Should Social Media
Be Censored" at Oxford Bookstore here where he highlighted how the
beginning of the Arab Spring fuelled a revolution in the field of social
media.
"The dictator regimes in the west Asian countries had
banned the Internet when the Arab Spring began. But they couldn't
control social media, so all the news updates about what was happening
in their countries was reported from what journalists saw and received
through social media," said Tewari.
Social media has often been
criticised for fanning sexist and racist remarks and communal tension,
with people getting offended at the slightest remark and joining a
tirade against those who posted their opinions.
The recent
decision of the Supreme Court striking down Section 66 A of the
Information Technology Act has been welcomed by the champions of free
speech and curbed the tendencies of those who have misused this law.
"The
issue with social media is that it allows people to get away easily as
they wear a garb of anonymity under which they post offensive comments,"
he said.
"Internet should be a safe space and there should be a mechanism to make it safer for women," he added.