The rumours range from people stealing kids for tantric human sacrifice rituals to sneaky trafficking agents abducting young boys and girls from the countryside to ship them off to towns and cities to slave in factories or as domÂestic helps or, in worst-case scenarios, to be sold to brothels. Other versions touch on more conventional insecurities: a childless couple on the prowl to snatch children, preferably toddlers, to raise as their own or those who only have daughters and are now 바카라hunting바카라 for a son.
The messages travel at the speed of light through neighbourhoods as WhatsApp forwards and Facebook posts uniting masses of people on the basis of common fears. Much like an outbreak, the viral 바카라child-abductor바카라 posts have already claÂimed the lives of more than twenty innocent victims at the hands of feverishly hysterical mobs.
The latest news of lynchings has come out of Maharashtra. Five men from a Ânomadic community in Maharashtra바카라s Dhule district landed in a village market on July 1, but didn바카라t return home. They were confronted when one of them tried to make conversation with a young girl. Rumours were already circulating on WhatsApp about a gang of child abductors roaming in the village.


The conclusion about these five 바카라outsiders바카라 being 바카라child lifters바카라 was arrived at in a reductive, almost algorithmically inhuman manner. The villagers caught and locked the men in a panchayat house and beat them to death with sticks and iron rods. The attack in Rainpada village happened in front of unarmed policemen, who were clearly outnumbered and overwhelmed by the mob.
A day later, the police managed to prevent another mob of around 2,000 people from taking the lives of five labourers in Malegaon. 바카라Both cases in Maharashtra were due to rumours on social media platforms such as WhatsApp, Facebook and Twitter,바카라 Malegaon additional superintendent of police Harssh A. Poddar said.
These two cases happened after a fatal assault on two tribal men by a mob of around 400 people in Aurangabad district바카라s Chandgaon village on June 8. Buried under the widespread condemnation over the Aurangabad lynching were occasional WhatsApp posts of praise for the vigilantes for teaching suspected child snatchers a lesson.
Statistically speaking, child safety is a very real issue. Human trafficking is a huge problem the government is grappling with. According to the National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB), there were 8,132 human trafficking cases in 2016 against 6,877 the previous year, with the highest number of cases reported in West Bengal, followed by Rajasthan. The data showed more than 60 per cent of the victims rescued were children.
But, like melodrama, this wave of Ârumours draws more from lore and myth, making any 바카라stranger바카라 a suspicious person. As a result, public spaces are becoming hostile like never before.
A 45-year-old woman was lynched to death in Ahmedabad on June 26 by a mob after she was 바카라suspected바카라 of being a child abductor. Another woman, who was atteÂnding a family function in Surat, was beaten by a mob when she stepped out to buy balloons for her three-year-old daughter on similar suspicions. Just a month ago, a 60-year-old woman was lynched for giving 바카라foreign chocolates바카라 to children in Tamil Nadu바카라s Tiruvannamalai district. In June again, a man hired by the Tripura government to spread awareness about fake news on child abductors was lynched by tribal villagers in a remote hamlet of the state who thought he was the wolf in sheep skin instead.
바카라Social media is like a matchstick to the already blind crowd. Its advent has caused a strong disconnect in humÂan-to-human interaction, which results in people blindly trusting rumours and the brain taking actions tuned to a stubborn mindset. This happened in the Stone Age, when disconnected humans attacked any suspicious object,바카라 Mumbai-based psychiatrist Harish Shetty said, explaining the dark side of instant and virtual communication.
The fake news wave has prompted polÂice to scan social networks, especially WhatsApp group chats, for inceÂndiary stuff. But that won바카라t be easy as the country has more than 200 million WhatsApp users, the Facebook-owned instant messaging app바카라s biggest market in the world, and all messages are encrypted from end-to-end.
After the Maharashtra lynchings, the state바카라s Âdirector general of police, Datta Padsalgikar, has advised people to maintain peace and not come under the influence of 바카라rumours spread maliciously바카라. 바카라It is also advised that no one should forward the received messages/rumours on WhatsApp or other social media without verification. All police Âofficers have been instructed to spread awareness,바카라 Padsalgikar reportedly said.
The warnings and arrests have not deteÂrred the rumour mill, which continues to spark mob violence across India. The government바카라s recourse is to ask social networks to share more user data to help track down 바카라rumour mongers바카라. But such efforts have hit several walls, including the issue of infringing Âindividual privacy.
On several occasions, fake news spawns and overlaps fresh unverified massages, as was the case after two friends바카라Nilotpal Das, a 29-year-old sound engineer based in Goa, and Abhijeet Nath, a businessman from Guwahati바카라were lynched mid-June in Karbi Anglong district of Assam on the suspicion of being child abdÂuctors. They had gone to a scenic picnic spot at Kangthilangso in the hill district to capture the sounds of nature, but came back home in body bags.
Reports said the duo was stopped by villagers on their way back, pulled out of their car and thrashed. A video of the Âattack surfaced later, in which one of them was seen pleading for mercy and telling the mob that they were Assamese.
After the fatal assault, unverified repÂorts circulated that the two friends may have seen and photographed gangs quarrying quartz stones secretly and illegally in the area and the mafia got them eliminated. However, there is no official confirmation on this count.
By Neel Shah in Mumbai