The Weekend Leader - BJP alleges FB staff worked for IYC, Derek

BJP alleges FB staff worked for IYC, Derek

ANINDYA BANERJEE   |  New Delhi

18-August-2020

Photo: IANS

Seeking to turn the tables on the Congress on the controversy surrounding Facebook and its WhatsApp messaging service, the BJP on Tuesday sought to link the social media platform with the opposition Congress and even the Trinamool Congress in the past.

On Tuesday, the Congress held a press conference wherein it continued to attack the BJP on the Facebook issue by claiming its senior executive Ankhi Das was in contact with senior BJP leaders and MPs in the run-up to the 2014 Lok Sabha elections.

On the other hand, the BJP brought up the name of Congress Spokesman and former Union Minister Manish Tewari in the whole affair, apart from people like Vijaya Moorthy and Kavitha KK, to suggest the platform's alleged past affiliations to the Congress and even the TMC.


BJP's Information Technology Cell chief Amit Malviya told IANS that Vijaya Moorthy, a part of the Public Policy team in Facebook, had worked for the Congress in the past.

In fact, he claimed, she had worked in a "nationwide electoral project" of the Youth Congress. She had a stint in an "NGO in socio-political space", as per her LinkedIn profile, between January 2012 and April 2015.

Malviya also alleged that Kavitha KK, whose LinkedIn profile also shows her to be working for the social media giant, has also worked for a Trinamool Congress MP in the past.


In fact, Kavitha's LinkedIn profile mentions working as Principal Policy Associate for TMC leader Derek O'Brien between 2015 and 2017.

Regardless of Manish Tewari's denial, Malviya claimed he had worked for Atlantic Council in the past.

"Tewari was appointed a distinguished senior fellow of Atlantic Council, which in turn was entrusted with the job of rooting out political propaganda from Facebook. Like it or not, it's a fact," the BJP's IT Cell chief asserted.


He claimed that in the run-up to the 2019 general elections, there were at least 700 Facebook pages aligned with the BJP's core ideology, some even running into million followers, but were taken down.

IANS came across a press release dated January 9, 2017 by Atlantic Council that quoted its then South Asia Center Director Bharath Gopalaswamy as saying: "We are delighted to welcome Manish Tewari to our team. We are eager to draw on his expertise from his years of service to the government of India, and he will be an invaluable addition to the South Asia Center team as we look to deepen our programming on India and the subcontinent."

Tewari insists these are "smear campaigns". He claims he was a distinguished senior fellow with the South Asia Center, where his tenure was from January 1, 2017 to December 31, 2019. He claims he was succeeded by BJP's Jay Panda.


BJP's Rajya Sabha MP Rajeev Chandrasekhar brought up the Congress' alleged connection with Cambridge Analytica to hit back at the opposition party.

"They (Congress) were recently cosying up to Cambridge Analytica and Facebook to try and do hit jobs on the BJP, as recently as 2018."

The Facebook-Cambridge Analytica was a data leak in early 2018, whereby millions of Facebook users' personal data was harvested without consent by the firm, primarily for political advertising.


Though Congress had tried to distance itself, a Congress poster in then Cambridge Analytica CEO's London office came out in the public domain, leaving the party baffled.

Meanwhile, even as Congress leader Pawan Khera tried to make out a case against the BJP on the whole issue, Malviya furnishing more examples from the past to connect Khera's part with the social media company.

He claimed that Ajit Mohan, MD of Facebook-India, had worked with the Planning Commission during the UPA era. He alleged that Sidharth Mazumdar, another Facebook employee who 'worked in the firm's Public policy team', had worked with Ahmed Patel, a close aide of Congress interim President Sonia Gandhi.

With political recriminations on the issue likely to continue for some more time after the fresh salvos by the ruling party, it seems that the Congress has as much, if not more, to answer as the BJP. -IANS



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