IT Minister Rajeev Chandrasekhar on Saturday pulled up WhatsApp for tweeting a video that depicted an incorrect map of India and asked it to fix the error immediately, following which the messaging platform deleted the tweet and apologised.
As the minister called out WhatsApp over the distortions in the map of the country, he also warned that "all platforms that do business in India and/or want to continue to do business in India, must use correct maps".
"Dear @WhatsApp - Request that you pls fix the India map error asap"," Chandrasekhar tweeted after the Meta-owned messaging platform put out a New Year-related tweet showing a wrong map of India.
The video post by WhatsApp about a New Year eve livestream depicted the globe that showed an incorrect map of India with regard to Jammu and Kashmir.
WhatsApp deleted the tweet after it was flagged by the minister.
"Thank you Minister for pointing out the unintended error; we have promptly removed the stream, apologies. We will be mindful in the future," WhatsApp tweeted.
Chandrasekhar had, earlier this week, also cautioned video calling company Zoom's founder and chief executive officer Eric Yuan over an incorrect map of India.
"Your may want to make sure you use correct maps of the countries you do/ want to do business in," the minister had tweeted on December 28. Yuan had later deleted the tweet in question.
In June 2021, micro-blogging platform Twitter itself had come under heavy criticism for displaying a distorted map of India. Twitter removed the wrong map after it faced online backlash.
Big social media platforms have drawn flak in the past over hate speech, misinformation and fake news circulating on their platforms.
The government, last year, introduced
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