Police in India visited Twitter offices over ‘manipulated media’ label

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Delhi police, controlled by India’s central government, on Monday evening visited two offices of Twitter — in the national capital state of Delhi and Gurgaon, in neighboring state of Haryana — to seek more information about Twitter’s rationale to label one of the tweets by ruling partly BJP spokesperson

as “manipulated media.”

An hour into the search attempt, Delhi Police Special Cell team, which investigates terrorism and other crimes, vacated Twitter’s offices because they were closed and there were no Twitter employees to engage with at the premises, according to live broadcast by several local news channels.

A Twitter spokesperson declined to comment. India, the world’s second largest internet market, is a key overseas region for Twitter and many other American technology firms.

New Delhi sent a notice to Twitter last week after the social network

labeled a tweet from Sambit Patra

, the spokesperson of India’s ruling party BJP, as “manipulated media.”

In the tweet, Patra had claimed that Congress, the leading opposition party in India, was using a so-called “toolkit” to derail the Indian government’s efforts against the coronavirus pandemic. Alt News, a leading fact-checking organization in India, had

debunked Patra’s claim

.

Delhi police said it had received a complaint about the classification of Patra’s tweet, which it said it was investigating, and visited the offices to serve Twitter India’s head a notice of the inquiry. In a statement, the police said Twitter India’s managing director’s replies on the subject had been “very ambiguous.”

Delhi Police Special Cell team returns from Gurgaon after they find the Twitter India offices shut. Apparently there is work from home at

@TwitterIndia

since March last year. Was this move by Government to send out a message? pic.twitter.com/aCBfjhb5CC

Aditya Raj Kaul (@AdityaRajKaul)

May 24, 2021

“Delhi Police is enquiring into a complaint in which clarification is sought from Twitter regarding the classification of a tweet by Shri Sambit Patra (BJP spokesman) as ‘manipulative’. It appears that Twitter has some information which is not known to us on the basis of which they have classified it as such,” Delhi Police said in an earlier statement to local TV channels and

other journalists

.

“This information is relevant to the enquiry. Special Cell which is conducting the enquiry wants to find out the truth. Twitter which has claimed to know the underlying truth should clarify,” it added.

In a follow up statement, it disputed the characterization of today’s event as “raiding.”

Several policy executives and the like questioned Delhi Police’s motives.

As India seeks priority assistance from the international community esp from the US, I guess this is one way to convince them that it is focused on the real problem at hand.

https://t.co/QqBhbx0oYN

Tanvi Madan (@tanvi_madan)

May 24, 2021

Label a ruling party spokesperson's tweet as containing manipulated media? Well, the Union Govt will bsend in the Special Cell stormtroopers of the Delhi Police to your India subsidiary's office in the national capital region to show you what's what.

Blatant authoritarianism.

https://t.co/rzt8Nf0bVd

Raman Chima (@tame_wildcard)

May 24, 2021

This would be funny if it wasn’t tragic.

@DelhiPolice

knows that no data is physically stored at @TwitterIndia

offices hence purpose of raid is nothing but intimidation. https://t.co/jgfWTMO2L2

Raheel Khursheed (@Raheelk)

May 24, 2021

The move also comes at a time when Twitter and Facebook are inching closer to the deadline to

comply with India’s new guidelines

to regulate social media.

In a new notice to both the firms, New Delhi warned that “failure to comply with IT rules could lead to loss of status and protections as intermediaries.”

Today’s development is the latest headache for the American firm, which has been struggling to maintain peace with the Indian government for several months.

After briefly complying with a New Delhi order early this year, the company faced heat from the government for

restoring accounts that had posted tweets critical of the Indian government’s policy

or the Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

The two faced off again publicly last month after New Delhi ordered Twitter and Facebook to

take down posts

that were critical of the government’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic.

*The story was updated throughout with additional details. *