When you search for ISIS, the police search for you

Cops trawling social media add Jaish-e-Mohammed to alert list

January 05, 2016 12:00 am | Updated November 17, 2021 03:13 am IST

ISIS, IS, Syria and Jihad are currently the top keywords the Mumbai Police are keeping tabs on. Police officials trawling Facebook and Twitter said the number of people searching for these keywords is “considerably high”, giving rise for the need to watch such accounts more closely.

The Mumbai Police’s Social Media Lab was inaugurated in 2013 to keep an eye on social media and get a better sense of the public mood, which could help prevent potential law and order problems.

With the rise of the Islamic State (IS) and its significant presence on the Internet, the police are now making use of specially developed tools to flag relevant keywords on social media.

“We earlier had our tools set to identify keywords pertaining to historic, religious and political figures, as there was a huge controversy in 2014 about objectionable content regarding such figures. Over the last few months, we have redefined our parameters and currently, the IS and related words are a priority,” said a senior Mumbai police officer.

The officer said that a majority of the people still search for ‘ISIS” even though the terrorist outfit now calls itself IS, and hence ‘ISIS’ is also among the list of constant keywords, along with ‘Syria’ and ‘Jihad’.

Apart from these fixed keywords, the police also keep adding and removing keywords from their tools depending on events in the country and around the world. “Currently, in light of the Pathankot terror strikes, we have added ‘Jaish-e-Mohammed’ to our list of keywords,” said a source.

Other than watching the social media space for who is searching about the IS, the police are also quick to block posts that are potentially inflammatory.

Almost every day, the Cyber Cell of the Mumbai Police receives reports about posts containing the keywords that are flagged by its tools. The data are then analysed and accounts that are found to be searching for flagged keywords a number of times are viewed and the content shared by them studied. Posts about the IS or any content that is communally sensitive in nature are then identified, after which a report on these posts is sent to Facebook authorities, requesting that they be blocked.

An IPS officer, while refusing to share specifics, said, “ISIS and related keywords are among the most searched in Mumbai. What is also worrying is that a majority of the posts that we block on Facebook are communally inflammatory in nature.”

The IS is a matter of particular concern for law enforcement agencies when it comes to watching cyberspace, as it has a huge presence online, including videos on YouTube, Twitter and Facebook.

Kalyan native Areeb Majeed, who had fled the country to join the IS in 2014 and was subsequently brought back to India, is reported to have been radicalised online, while Malwani youth Ayaz Sultan, who is missing and suspected to have joined the IS or a similar organisation, was also very active on the Internet, accessing and sharing radical content.

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