From Instagram to TikTok: Indians Wage Online Battle Against Citizenship Act

Tens of thousands of Indians have protested against the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA), with students at the forefront.

Advertisement
By Reuters | Updated: 19 December 2019 11:17 IST
Highlights
  • Social media users pick TikTok, Instagram over WhatsApp, Twitter
  • Instagram preferred as it allows protection against the online harassment
  • Critics say that the new citizenship law is biased against Muslims

Users say they can't control who views or shares their pictures or videos on WhatsApp

As protests rage across Indian universities against a new citizenship law, students have taken to social media to wage battle online and teach people how to organise demonstrations.

Instagram is popular with some because it can be used to share pictures and video, while its settings allow protection against the online harassment that users can suffer on other platforms.

"I don't like Twitter because each time I open it I see so much hate," said Abdul Rehman, 22, an engineering student at New Delhi's Jamia Millia Islamia University.

Advertisement

"There is no way to control who is viewing or sharing my pictures or videos on WhatsApp and most of my audience is not on Facebook."

Advertisement

Tens of thousands of Indians have protested against the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA), with students at the forefront.

Approved by India's president last week, the law paves the way for minorities from Pakistan, Bangladesh and Afghanistan to get Indian citizenship, but critics say it is biased against Muslims.

Advertisement

One protest on Sunday culminated in police storming the Jamia Millia Islamia University, leaving some 200 injured.

Current and former students have taken to Instagram, a photo and video sharing platform known for lifestyle content, to express their disapproval.

Advertisement

"We millennials are always active on Instagram," said Islam Mirza, who completed a masters in business administration at Jamia earlier this year. "Whether it is to call off the protest, whether it is to organise the protests, whether it is to instruct students what to do or what not to do to help keep the protests peaceful, we use Instagram as a messenger."

Many also use the platform to educate others about what they see as potential concerns with the new legislation.

While Facebook and its messenger WhatsApp are also being used to drive conversations about the CAA and protests, over half a dozen students from Jamia said Instagram was their preferred choice of social media.

Avoiding hate Privacy settings on Instagram offer an escape from trolling or online harassment on platforms such as Twitter, said Torsha Sarkar, a policy officer at the Centre for Internet and Society in Bengaluru.

The active presence of film, music and fashion celebrities on Instagram also makes it an appealing platform for young users to post pictures and videos for all to see, unlike Facebook or WhatsApp where conversations are largely private or among a user's close social circle.

It's not all one-way traffic though. Many are using social media to support the government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

Chinese firm ByteDance's TikTok, which allows users to create and share short videos with special effects, is also being used to voice opposition to the citizenship law.

A video posted by user @monuqureshi142 shows two women, one dressed in a white jumper and blue jeans, the other in a burqa, shouting slogans to a cheering crowd of hundreds outside Jamia University's main gate.

The soundtrack is dubbed over by a male voice rapping in Hindi.

"They malign us when we speak of our rights, the government and police feign ignorance from it all ... Unite, listen Muslims now all of you unite."

© Thomson Reuters 2019

 

Get your daily dose of tech news, reviews, and insights, in under 80 characters on Gadgets 360 Turbo. Connect with fellow tech lovers on our Forum. Follow us on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News for instant updates. Catch all the action on our YouTube channel.

Further reading: Instagram, TikTok, WhatsApp, Facebook, ByteDance
Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. Tim Cook Reveals the Secret Behind Apple's Success, Says Can't Be Replicated
  2. Apple Smart Home Display Could Launch Later This Year as Siri Faces Delay
  3. Poco X8 Pro, Poco X8 Pro Max to Launch on This Date
  4. iQOO Z11 Teased With 165Hz Display, 9,020mAh Battery; China Launch Expected Soon
  5. Vivo X300s Expected to Launch Soon as Company Executive Reveals Key Features
  6. Vivo V70 FE Arrives With a 7,000mAh Battery: See Price, Specifications
  7. These WhatsApp Features Could Soon Roll Out on iOS, Android
  8. Leaked Renders Show Us What Apple's Rumoured iPhone Fold Might Look Like
  9. Samsung Galaxy M17e 5G India Launch Set for March 17: Features
  1. iQOO Z11 Teased With 165Hz Display, 9,020mAh Battery; China Launch Expected Soon
  2. Apple Reportedly Assembled 25 Percent of 230 Million iPhone Units in India in 2025
  3. Apple Said to Finalise iPhone 18e Plans With Dynamic Island Upgrade and 2027 Launch Window, Tipster Claims
  4. Apple Reportedly Delays Smart Home Display Due to Unfinished AI Features; iPhone 18 Pro to Bring New Siri
  5. NASA’s Webb Telescope Confirms Asteroid 2024 YR4 Will Safely Pass the Moon in 2032
  6. ChatGPT Adult Mode Delayed Again as OpenAI's 'Code Red' Reportedly Ends
  7. Lava Bold 2 5G India Launch Date Announced; Confirmed to Feature Under-Display Fingerprint Scanner
  8. Realme Note 80 Launched With 6,300mAh Battery, 6.74-Inch Display: Price, Specifications
  9. Anthropic’s Claude Finds 22 Vulnerabilities in Mozilla Firefox in Just Two Weeks
  10. Samsung Galaxy Smartphones Get Inactivity Restart Security Feature With Latest Update: Report
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2026. All rights reserved.