Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh today said that social media was posing serious challenge to law enforcement agencies.
Inaugurating a two-day Asia-Pacific regional conference of the International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP) in New Delhi, Singh said that the area of concerns included terrorism, financial frauds and victimisation of women and children.
The home minister pointed out that incidents of serious crime take place because the police and citizens do not work together to prevent decay of social norms and social disorder.
“The social media has also posed serious challenge to policing. The three main issues are (i) law and order, (ii) cyber crimes like fake and imitating accounts, financial frauds (Nigerian 419 frauds), malware delivery, drug and other illegal article sales, victimisation of women and children and (iii) terrorism,” Rajnath Singh said.
It should be recalled that during Muzaffarnagar riots of 2013, the government had said that social media was used extensively by anti-social elements to spread hatred and misinformation among communities.
Even in 2012, it was alleged that the mass exodus of people of the Northeast from south India had taken place due to a misinformation campaign carried out through Internet and social media.
Rajnath Singh had in the past said social media has been increasingly used in the country to instigate communal riots and needed strong action to curb them.
The growing presence of global terrorist outfits such as the Islamic State on social media only reflected the security establishment’s concern. Many violent videos and jihadi messages uploaded by several terrorist organisations enhancing their appeal among vulnerable and disgruntled internet users, officials said.
One Al Qaida video showing its leader Ayman al Zawahiri announcing an Indian arm was seen by many Indian youths.
Agencies are particularly concerned about ISIS’s growing appeal among Internet-savvy youths, given that at least 30 Indian men are said to have been recruited by it for overseas jihad.
At today’s conference, the home minister also said serious crime develops because the police and citizens do not work together to prevent decay of social norms and social disorder.
“The community policing faces a huge trust deficit. Level of trust is particularly very low amongst socially weaker section, economically poor, minority groups, women, elderly and children. Police forces need to be more democratised,” he said.
(With PTI inputs)