An Indian studying in the United Kingdom found himself ensnared in a web of slander during the student union elections at the London School of Economics (LSE) for supporting the development of “Bharat” under Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
Pune-born Satyam Surana last year came into the spotlight when he defiantly picked up the tricolour from the road during an attack at the Indian High Commission by extremist elements. In a series of social media posts on March 26, Satyam said he was targeted for taking a pro-India position on issues like terrorism and Ram mandir, during the LSE student polls.
#WATCH | An Indian Student at the London School of Economics, Satyam Surana who came to the limelight when he picked up the tricolour from the road, defying the attack at the Indian High Commission in the United Kingdom by extremist elements last year, now alleges hate campaigns… pic.twitter.com/aXsVC2PIWD
— ANI (@ANI) March 27, 2024
CALLED ‘FASCIST AND WORSE’
Satyam’s ordeal began when his campaign posters for the position of General Secretary were defaced and torn. Recalling the series of events, he revealed, “There were crosses on my face, it was written ‘anyone but Satyam’. I was cancelled out.” As the election fervour heightened, Satyam said the smear campaign against him also increased. Messages flooded LSE groups, branding him as a ‘BJP supporter,’ ‘fascist,’ and worse,” he told news agency ANI, adding, that the messages were “seditious and contentious of the Indian government.”
Satyam said that his social media presence became a battleground, with innocuous posts twisted to fit a nefarious agenda. Satyam, disheartened by the vicious attacks, remarked, “My posts were used with a malicious agenda to call me a ‘fascist.’” Despite his manifesto focusing solely on campus improvements, Satyam found himself unfairly targeted.
“When these messages started coming, my entire team was shocked, we were in a dilemma,” he confessed, revealing the toll the hate campaign took on his morale. Satyam’s past activism, including his brave act of picking up the national flag amidst Khalistani protestors, became ammunition for his detractors. “I was targeted for calling Khalistanis as ‘terrorists’ in one of my posts,” he stated, highlighting how his patriotism was twisted into an indictment.