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The Toongate Fallout

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PCQ Bureau
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Q. Why did Mamata Banerjee cross the road?



A. To see if the chicken was making fun of her.

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In mid-April, the chief minister of West Bengal went viral with a vengeance.

Hundreds of tweets (like the one above by @harqblack) carried the trendy #arrestmenow tag. Courting arrest got a new meaning.

Now, Mamata is not the first to go viral. But such speed is usually found in other domains. Mamata "Didi" is a far cry from Poonam Pandey or Sunny Leone in every way.

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But on April 12, on her direction, Kolkata police arrested a Jadavpur University professor of chemistry for emailing a cartoon to a few friends.

The offending cartoon was mild and childish. It picks a dialogue from the Satyajit Ray movie Shonar Kella (the Golden Fort), and has Mamata pointing to a Railways logo and saying: "See that, Mukul? Shonar Kella!" At which point Mukul Roy sees Dinesh Trivedi and says: "Bad man!" And Mamata says: "Bad man? Vanish!"

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But it had Mamata frothing in rage, and Prof Ambikesh Mohapatra behind bars, charged with wild crimes — IPC sections 509 (insulting the modesty of a woman), 500 (defamation) and 114 (abetting a crime), and IT Act section 66 A(b) (causing offence using a computer).

But not before the professor was assaulted by over a dozen goons, four of whom (including two Trinamool Congress workers) were later arrested..

The fallout was immediate. Welcome to social media, Mamata.

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The harmless, childish toon went wildly viral across the Internet. A thousand people saw it earlier, but in 24 hours, a million people had seen and shared it. In 48 hours, the number reached tens of millions through Facebook, Twitter and TV. And a mild, unknown Bengali became the most famous professor in India, an icon of free speech.

The social media were flooded with messages and tweets, mocking Didi - a flood of jokes with the #arrestmenow Twitter-tag that became a top trending tag on that day - and severely criticizing her Hitleresque reaction to a harmless cartoon.

The outburst quickly transferred itself onto global media, with columns, critiques and a range of coverage that Mamata could hardly have aspired to.

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There are two big learnings from ToonGate, other than the fact that Hitler is an anachronism in the social media era.

One, banning a cartoon (or any other communication) is beyond stupid, at least as a means of suppression. A thousand-viewer cartoon now has ten million and counting.

Two, that the misuse of the IT Act as an instrument of suppression — specifically, section 66A — will rise.

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In the IT Act (2008 amendment), section 66A covers sending anything electronically that is grossly offensive or has menacing character.

In this case, the cartoon in question (twitpic.com/9975yy) was posted on various Facebook profiles,and subsequently used widely in electronic media. Yet, the professor's act of forwarding it by email to a few friends has been considered a cyber crime.

The Ministry of ICT needs to urgently seek legal advice and recommend a modification. For a start, pre-publication in mainstream media in could become grounds for non-applicability of section 66A. But I am not a lawyer. I am sure that given the will, they can find a way.

And a footnote. I sent that cartoon by email to friends, perhaps before the professor did. Now it's here, and on my blog, pkr.in. Arrest me, Ms Banerjee?

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