A documentary will follow. The symbol of cyberbullying Rana Ayyub becomes famous, “more than I would have liked,” she says. The attacks from BJP supporters begin. “They are violent, hateful. I understand that they are organized by the state, but I have no reason to be afraid at that time. I am focused, pugnacious. I respond to the attacks, and continue my work.” She also reveals to several newspapers and news sites, several additional pieces of information on the “fundamentalist machine.” Here she is sitting at a table with friends, in 2018, “for happy hour.
My head had been edited onto pornographic images. I isolated myself for a few minutes, and I…” 8.5 million tweets Rana Ayyub's martyrdom has only just begun. Several pornographic campaigns will follow. Here she is accused of jihadism, with doctored photos to support her claim. Researchers from the International Center for Journalists analyzed the 8.5 million tweets about Rana Ayyub. "Even for detached analysts, this work was a psychological nightmare," says Julie Posetti, who led the research.
"To this troll war, the government of Ramendra twitter data Modi "added more traditional forms of harassment," continues Julie Posetti. Rana Ayyub and his entire family are accused of money laundering. "Several accusations are piling up, without conviction to date, in what looks like "gag procedures." "My friends no longer wanted to see me in public, me, the thief and the porn actress. The BJP's Twitter feeds and Whatsapp channels had become, and still are, the main source of information for the Hindu population. Even some Muslims consult them.
I couldn't fight. As for the newspapers, they are not all favorable to the government. But they are obsessed with their precious access to official sources. They are extremely institutional. And then their bosses, all men, believed that there was perhaps no smoke without fire." Mental attack, a new weapon Thanks to extraordinary determination and the support of the English-language press around the world, “which came late but was massive,” says Julie Posetti, Rana Ayyub was able to hold on and continue writing. “ The Washington Post offered me a job as well as protection,” she admits.