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						Twitter CEO trolled for 'hate mongering' against India's 
						Brahmins
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		 [November 20, 2018]   
		By Krishna N. Das 
 NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Twitter CEO Jack 
		Dorsey has kicked up a social media storm in India after a picture of 
		him with a placard saying "smash Brahminical patriarchy", referring to 
		the highest Hindu caste, went viral in one of the company's 
		fastest-growing markets.
 
 The picture, posted on Twitter on Sunday by a journalist who was part of 
		group of women journalists, activists, writers whom Dorsey met during a 
		visit to India last week, had him clutching a poster of a woman holding 
		up a banner with the line that has offended many Indians.
 
 Several prominent Indians, including T.V. Mohandas Pai, a former finance 
		chief of software exporter Infosys <INFY.NS>, accused Dorsey of "hate 
		mongering" against Brahmins.
 
 "Tomorrow if @jack is given a poster with anti Semitic messages in a 
		meeting, will his team allow him to hold it up?," Pai tweeted. "Why is 
		that any different? Inciting hate against any community is wrong."
 
		
		 
		
 Twitter India <TWTR.N> said the poster was handed to Dorsey by a Dalit 
		activist - Dalits are at the bottom of the social hierarchy in Hinduism 
		- when it hosted a closed-door discussion with a group of women to know 
		more about their experience using Twitter.
 
 It added the poster was a "tangible reflection of our company's efforts 
		to see, hear, and understand all sides of important public conversations 
		that happen on our service around the world".
 
 Late on Monday, Vijaya Gadde, legal, policy and trust and safety lead at 
		Twitter who accompanied Dorsey to India, apologized.
 
		
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			 Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey 
			addresses students during a town hall at the Indian Institute of 
			Technology (IIT) in New Delhi, India, November 12, 2018. REUTERS/Anushree 
			Fadnavis 
            
			 
"I'm very sorry for this. It's not reflective of our views. We took a private 
photo with a gift just given to us - we should have been more thoughtful," she 
said in a tweet. "Twitter strives to be an impartial platform for all. We failed 
to do that here & we must do better to serve our customers in India." 
Twitter, whose monthly active users globally averaged 326 million in the 
July-September quarter, does not disclose the number of its users in India but 
its executives have said that the country was one of its fastest growing.
 Its use is only expected to grow in India in the coming months as political 
parties in the country of 1.3 billion try to expand their reach to voters ahead 
of a general election due by May.
 
 Prime Minister Narendra Modi, with 44.4 million followers, is one of its biggest 
supporters.
 
 "I enjoy being on this medium, where I’ve made great friends and see everyday 
the creativity of people," Modi tweeted last week after meeting Dorsey in New 
Delhi.
 
 (Reporting by Krishna N. Das; Editing by Michael Perry)
 
				 
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