Thursday, October 8, 2015

Protest Against Fuel Crisis Through Twitter


Oct 8, 2015-Wednesday ended up being an exciting day for online networking clients as they followed up on their tweets by get-together outside the Indian Embassy in the Capital to give petroleum items.

It started when a news broke out that the Indian Embassy had asked for the Nepal Oil Corporation for petroleum items. Twitter then ejected with hashtag #DonateOilToIndianEmbassy.

"After international safe haven of India, which has forced barricade on #Nepal, approaches Nepal govt for fuel, new hashtag rises #DonateOilToIndian-Embassy," tweeted writer Deepak Adhikari (@DeepakAdk).

As indicated by Topsy, a site that screens twitter patterns, at one point the hashtag was tweeted more than 17k times in 60 minutes. Generally speaking, the hashtag was tweeted more than 60k times everywhere throughout the world. "Twitter users battle to #DonateOilToIndianEmbassy after the Embassy asked for supply of fuel in the midst of emergency brought on by #IndiaBlockadesNepal," tweeted @UjjwalAcharya.

The hashtag finished into a typical dissent outside the international safe haven premises at 3pm where no less than 150 individuals assembled with notices that read 'Back Off India' and 'Give Oil to Indian Embassy', among others.

Dissenters lined up petrol bottles as an indication of challenge and droned mottos, including singing the national song of praise. Kamal Mani Nepal, a spectator amid the challenge, said while he coincidentally was be at the dissent, he met very much a couple of his companions who had come in the wake of seeing the hashtag on twitter. "My companions chose to come to bolster the activity started on twitter."
Likewise present was Bibeksheel Nepal's pioneer Ujjwal Thapa who said this was not an arranged challenge but rather an unconstrained choice made by a gathering of online networking clients. "These individuals accumulated suddenly, some piece of online networking assembly," he said.

Taking after a couple rounds of sloganeering, two dissenters were permitted inside the international safe haven to hand over letters that got out the Indian government for meddling in the barricade. This is not the first occasion when that a hashtag, identified with the political circumstance in the nation, has inclined Twitteratis posted 'Back Off India' after an Indian daily paper broke a news that the Indian government had requested that Nepal make seven revisions to the constitution.
"India is the main Nation in the entire world that has been assaulted (Now) 3 times consecutively with tweets#DonateOilToIndia," tweeted Anima Poudel.

No comments:

Post a Comment