Those were tweets from director, composer and columnist Shirish Kunder in response to the selective outrage on social media at 18-year-old Delhi University student Gurmehar Kaur who had posted a silent video with one of several placards declaring that Pakistan did not kill her father, war did.
When controversial Haryana minister Anil Vij advised supporters of the Gurmehar to shift to Pakistan, Kunder responded with the following tweet: “If every one of them is thrown out, only ISI agents, child traffickers, goons and trolls will be left behind.”
Hugely popular on Twitter with a following running into 2.95 lakh, Kunder has been a rage with his witty and thoughtful comments on society and politics. And at least some of his fans would be disappointed at Kunder tendering an apology after an FIR was filed in Lucknow against Kunder alleging that he had made derogatory statements against the UP chief minister Yogi Adityanath.
Published: 25 Mar 2017, 4:02 PM IST
Kunder tweeted that he “unconditionally apologised”. The allegedly offensive tweets, deleted by him now, were the following, according to PTI :
While the FIR filed by one Amit Kumar Tiwary, Secretary of Thakurdwara Trust at Ayodhya, served the dual purpose of extracting an apology from Kunder and some publicity to deter others from criticising the new UP chief minister, opinion is divided on whether the tweets would have attracted any penalty.
Kunder was clearly reacting to BJP spokesmen saying on TV that while Yogi Adityanath may have been guilty in the past of delivery hate speech and while the party had earlier distanced itself from him, anointing him the chief minister was like making the naughtiest student the class monitor.
While the Mumbai-based director and columnist must have reasoned that tendering an apology would save him from harassment, the episode raises questions on the role of the police, the media and the courts.
Will every complaint against trolls and much more virulent, violent and vulgar online attacks on people attract similar publicity and intimidating action by the police ?
Some of his earlier tweets show why Kunder is so popular. He does not seem to have crossed the ‘Lakshman Rekha’ drawn by either Law or society ever. But an imaginary line seems to have been drawn now by blind supporters of the UP chief minister.
One of his favourite responses was when he was asked whether his children were Hindu or Muslim, in an obvious reference to he being a Hindu and his wife being a Muslim. Kunder deadpanned : “Depends on which festival is next. Last month (December), they were Christians.”
Published: 25 Mar 2017, 4:02 PM IST
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Published: 25 Mar 2017, 4:02 PM IST