Post the declaration of the State Assembly elections in West Bengal, news of violence from various parts of the state began to be reported.
The re-elected Trinamool Congress government acknowledged that 16 people had died in the post-poll violence. However, other parties, including the BJP, have alleged that the numbers are higher and that at least 20 people have died. According to the families of the deceased, nine from BJP and eight from the TMC have claimed to have lost kin in the violence. A member of the CPI(M) and a supporter of the Indian Secular Front, have also been reported dead.
As the violence erupted, images and videos began to be circulated on social media platforms, said to be depicting the violence in West Bengal. Many of these visuals were shared by leaders of the BJP. However, AltNews, the independent fact-checking website, has debunked several of these images and videos as fake.
In this interview, The Wire's Seraj Ali discusses the repeated instances of post-poll violence in the state, the fake news ecosystem that surrounded it this time, and the events that are expected to follow with Himadri Ghosh, a journalist based in West Bengal who contributes to The Wire.'
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The re-elected Trinamool Congress government acknowledged that 16 people had died in the post-poll violence. However, other parties, including the BJP, have alleged that the numbers are higher and that at least 20 people have died. According to the families of the deceased, nine from BJP and eight from the TMC have claimed to have lost kin in the violence. A member of the CPI(M) and a supporter of the Indian Secular Front, have also been reported dead.
As the violence erupted, images and videos began to be circulated on social media platforms, said to be depicting the violence in West Bengal. Many of these visuals were shared by leaders of the BJP. However, AltNews, the independent fact-checking website, has debunked several of these images and videos as fake.
In this interview, The Wire's Seraj Ali discusses the repeated instances of post-poll violence in the state, the fake news ecosystem that surrounded it this time, and the events that are expected to follow with Himadri Ghosh, a journalist based in West Bengal who contributes to The Wire.'
Like our work? Click here to support The Wire: https://thewire.in/support
The founding premise of The Wire is this: if good journalism is to survive and thrive, it can only do so by being both editorially and financially independent. This means relying principally on contributions from readers and concerned citizens who have no interest other than to sustain a space for quality journalism. As a publication, The Wire will be firmly committed to the public interest and democratic values.
We publish in four different languages!
For English, visit www.thewire.in
for Hindi: http://thewirehindi.com/
for Urdu: http://thewireurdu.com
for Marathi: https://marathi.thewire.in
If you are a young writer or a creator, you can submit articles, essays, photos, poetry – anything that’s straight out of your imagination – to LiveWire, The Wire’s portal for the young, by the young. https://livewire.thewire.in/
You can also follow The Wire’s social media platforms and engage with us.
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https://twitter.com/thewirehindi
https://twitter.com/TheWireUrdu
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