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Fast Money & Foreign Objects
17 March 2015 Last updated at 12:39 ET
The politically loaded question that got India talking
BBC TrendingWhat's popular and why
A student's question to the International Monetary Fund chief is being mocked on Indian social media
In India, a female college student's pointed question to the head of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has inspired memes and exposed the country's political divisions.
It was a bold move. During a televised discussion, a young political science student stood up and directed a probing question to one of the world's most powerful women. Will growth in one of the world's fastest developing economies be inclusive, the student from Delhi Universityasked IMF chief Christine Lagarde, or would it be restricted to the "Hindu male population"?
The question was a reference to the newish government led by the Hindu nationalist BJP party. It was clear that the student was no fan of the government's policies, and party supporters were among those quick to react. The hashtag #NDTVGirlAsks has been mentioned more than 20,000 times on Twitter (NDTV being the network broadcasting the discussion).
Several of the comments accused her of being anti-Hindu and anti-Indian. "This #NDTVGirlAsks should be officially branded as national embarrassment. This is exactly the kind of feminism prevalent on Twitter and TV," said one tweet, while another joked, "#NDTVGirlAsks Does PhD stands for People with Hinduism degree?" NDTV was also accused of "planting" the student, although there's no indication she was anything but a random audience member.
The vast majority of tweets under the tag were against the student, and the dispute became the latest talking point for India's increasingly divided online political culture, where liberals are constantly on the look out for Hindu nationalism and government supporters jump to the defence of what they claim are conservative Indian values. India's culture wars have even played out through children's comic strips - as BBC Trending reported previously.
The student, who asked to be identified only by her first name, Paroma, says she wasn't aware of the online chatter about her until a friend pointed it out. "These comments come from deep-seated ignorance and insecurity about the fact that someone is questioning the whole development paradigm on which the new government came to power," she told BBC Trending in an email. "I have read deeply misogynistic comments. Some said that my grey matter was washed out with my menstrual cycle. These comments go on to prove that these fears that I have ... are not misplaced."
Some of the memes being circulated were created by Rahul Raj, the man behind a satirical news Facebook page, Bhak Sala. "I genuinely felt that her question was very lame," he says. "When I heard her question, I laughed for a good five to 10 minutes."
"The idea was to combat the ideology with light humour," he says, saying that the student's overtly political stance incited the social media reaction. "The question was loaded, and aimed at a person who would have no idea about such politics. I guess the politics contained in the question was what put off people, who decided to show how futile it was through memes."
Blog by Samiha Nettikkara
http://www.bbc.com/news/blogs-trending-31925156?ocid=socialflow_twitter
le sigh, India...
to Paroma for taking everyone to task
The politically loaded question that got India talking
A student's question to the International Monetary Fund chief is being mocked on Indian social media
In India, a female college student's pointed question to the head of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has inspired memes and exposed the country's political divisions.
It was a bold move. During a televised discussion, a young political science student stood up and directed a probing question to one of the world's most powerful women. Will growth in one of the world's fastest developing economies be inclusive, the student from Delhi Universityasked IMF chief Christine Lagarde, or would it be restricted to the "Hindu male population"?
The question was a reference to the newish government led by the Hindu nationalist BJP party. It was clear that the student was no fan of the government's policies, and party supporters were among those quick to react. The hashtag #NDTVGirlAsks has been mentioned more than 20,000 times on Twitter (NDTV being the network broadcasting the discussion).
Several of the comments accused her of being anti-Hindu and anti-Indian. "This #NDTVGirlAsks should be officially branded as national embarrassment. This is exactly the kind of feminism prevalent on Twitter and TV," said one tweet, while another joked, "#NDTVGirlAsks Does PhD stands for People with Hinduism degree?" NDTV was also accused of "planting" the student, although there's no indication she was anything but a random audience member.
The vast majority of tweets under the tag were against the student, and the dispute became the latest talking point for India's increasingly divided online political culture, where liberals are constantly on the look out for Hindu nationalism and government supporters jump to the defence of what they claim are conservative Indian values. India's culture wars have even played out through children's comic strips - as BBC Trending reported previously.
The student, who asked to be identified only by her first name, Paroma, says she wasn't aware of the online chatter about her until a friend pointed it out. "These comments come from deep-seated ignorance and insecurity about the fact that someone is questioning the whole development paradigm on which the new government came to power," she told BBC Trending in an email. "I have read deeply misogynistic comments. Some said that my grey matter was washed out with my menstrual cycle. These comments go on to prove that these fears that I have ... are not misplaced."
Some of the memes being circulated were created by Rahul Raj, the man behind a satirical news Facebook page, Bhak Sala. "I genuinely felt that her question was very lame," he says. "When I heard her question, I laughed for a good five to 10 minutes."
"The idea was to combat the ideology with light humour," he says, saying that the student's overtly political stance incited the social media reaction. "The question was loaded, and aimed at a person who would have no idea about such politics. I guess the politics contained in the question was what put off people, who decided to show how futile it was through memes."
Blog by Samiha Nettikkara
http://www.bbc.com/news/blogs-trending-31925156?ocid=socialflow_twitter
le sigh, India...
to Paroma for taking everyone to task
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