The
announcement marks a rare action from Facebook against a
prominent political party in a country where it has more than
300 million users, the highest in the world.
Facebook said its investigation found that individuals used fake
accounts and joined various groups to disseminate their content
and increase engagement. Their posts included local news and
criticism of political opponents such as Prime Minister Narendra
Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), Facebook said.
"While the people behind this activity attempted to conceal
their identities, our review found that it was connected to
individuals associated with an INC (Indian National Congress) IT
Cell," Nathaniel Gleicher, Head of Cybersecurity Policy at
Facebook, said in a statement.
Gleicher added that Facebook was removing accounts based on
their behavior, not the content they posted.
India's staggered election, scheduled to begin on April 11, will
end on May 19.
Two of the samples shared by Facebook were of posts that
criticized Modi's initiatives and called for supporting the
Congress party and its president, Rahul Gandhi.
The social media giant also said it was removing 103 pages,
groups and accounts, also for inauthentic behavior, as part of a
network which originated in Pakistan and was linked to employees
of the Inter-Service Public Relations department of the
Pakistani military.
Facebook has faced increasing pressure from authorities around
the world, including the Indian government, to ensure its
platform is not abused for political gains or to spread
misinformation, especially ahead of elections.
Facebook has toughened up its rules governing political
advertisements in India and many other countries to increase
transparency.
Last week, Facebook removed a social media network in the
Philippines and took the unusual step of linking it to a
businessman who said he had managed the president's online
election campaign in 2016. It has taken similar actions recently
against accounts in Russia and Iran.
Separately, Facebook said it had also removed another 227 pages
and 94 accounts in India for violating its policies against spam
and misrepresentation.
(Reporting by Aditya Kalra; Editing by Martin Howell and Nick
Macfie)
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