Indian Business Doesn’t Speak Up Against Injustice. Here’s Proof.

Advertisement
Read Time: 5 mins
An Apple iPhone is held as a laptop screen shows the Twitter logo. (Photographer: Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg)

Food doesn't have a religion. Remember this famous line from 2019, forever etched in the history of how Indian companies deal with hateful customers—and how you had to rub your eyes twice to ensure you hadn't read it wrongly?

When a customer cancelled his order in because it was being delivered by a Muslim, food aggregator Zomato tweeted the above, causing the country's leading business newspaper to describe it in a headline as a “savage reply”. Founder Deepinder Goyal followed it up with the even stronger, “we aren't sorry to lose any business that comes in the way of our values”.

Advertisement

It's a question to which we may already know the answer, but now—as we grapple with the silence of the majority in the face of everyday hate crimes against Muslim citizens and economic boycotts of Muslim small businesses—these researchers have a timely answer.

In their as yet unpublished paper titled Comparing corporate Twitter engagement on citizenship and immigration debated in India and the United States, authors Shehla Rashid Shora, Arshia Arya and Joyojeet Pal at Microsoft Research India compared the Twitter engagement of the 50 richest people in India and the U.S. on debates related to citizenship and immigration.

Advertisement

Both countries were debating contentious citizenship laws around the same time—India was protesting the Narendra Modi government's unfair Citizenship Amendment Act (alongside the National Register for Citizens) and in the U.S. there were deeply polarising debates around Donald Trump's decision to dismantle DACA, that protected children of undocumented immigrants from deportation. Both decisions were challenged in the respective Supreme Courts. While the top court in the U.S. blocked this unconstitutional move in 2020, the Indian challenge to the CAA is still pending.

Demonstrators gather to protest against the Citizen Amendment Act, at Jantar Mantar in New Delhi, on Jan. 29, 2020. (Photographer: T.Narayan/Bloomberg)

But how did the richest folks from these two countries tweet about these twin issues? How do they compare?

It's not the first time this trio of researchers has compared the privileged in both countries. In a previous study, they found that though Indian CEOs engaged with keywords such as “peace”, “justice”, and “strong institutions” they never really spoke up against specific instances of hate crime.

“While the Indian side is good at paying lip service on abstract themes such as gender, sustainability and justice in a generalised way, the American side is very outspoken on specific instances of hate crimes,” Shora, one of the authors said while presenting this paper at the University of Michigan recently.

Corporate heavyweights are not the only ones who lean towards this strategy. The reason well-known Indians prefer not to engage seems quite clear. In their paper Sporting the Government: Twitter as a window into sportspersons' engagement with causes in India and USA, authors Dibyendu Mishra, Ronojoy Sen, and Joyojeet Pal found that among the 200 most followed sportspersons in India and the U.S., the costs of speaking up against the state and the government in power have different socio-economic costs in the U.S. and India.

Loading...