Facebook live-streamed mass murder. Zuckerburg and Erdogan both profited from it. Capitalism, xenophobia, communal politics in a deadly mix

More than four days have passed since the world’s weakest man launched an assault that took the lives of 50 people at prayer in Christchurch. He did it with a camera stuck to his head, live-streaming it on Facebook, the world’s most powerful media company. It was taken down after police sounded the alarm. But already it had spread through Twitter – where links to the video sit untroubled still despite repeated reports. Already it had spread across Google’s YouTube platform, where the most ghoulish appetites on the planet are daily sated for profit.

But it was Facebook that broadcast it live. And for all that the world’s first genuinely megalithic media company might protest that it worked hard to scrub out this tech-dystopian freak show, the video continues to be shared on the platform today. More than four days on, then, the $64bn question (that’s how much Mr Zuckerberg is reportedly worth) is this: what do you have to say for yourself, Mark? Seems you’re busy, and instead have dispatched an underling to do the thoughts-and-prayers and “committed to countering hate speech and the threat of terrorism online”. Sitting here in New Zealand, that’s nowhere near good enough.
You’ve been silent, just as you were when you snubbed representatives of nine countries seeking answers on Facebook’s hazardous impact on democracy. They empty-chaired you. I hope, Mark, that you’re called to answer to the impending inquiry into what happened in Christchurch, to account for Facebook’s role as a propaganda conduit and distribution mechanism for terrorism in New Zealand... 

Peace as a punctuation mark in eternal war

Turkish president says anyone who comes to Gallipoli with anti-Muslim sentiments would be sent back in coffins
Erdoğan made the comments in Turkey’s north-western Çanakkale province, which is home to the historic battlefields, on the anniversary of a first world war Turkish naval victory. He criticised New Zealand and Australia for sending troops to Turkey in the first world war Gallipoli campaign, claiming their motive was anti-Islam-oriented. He called on New Zealand to amend its laws to ensure that the attacker is severely punished. 
Ignoring widespread criticism, Erdoğan again showed excerpts of a video taken by the attacker who killed 50 people in mosques in New Zealand, to denounce what he called rising hatred and prejudice against Islam. “What business did you have here? We had no issues with you, why did you come all the way over here?” Erdoğan said. “The only reason: we’re Muslim, and they’re Christian.” Erdoğan told supporters: “If New Zealand fails to hold the attacker accountable, one way or another we will hold him to account.”

The New Zealand police commissioner, Mike Bush, told reporters in Christchurch earlier that he was aware of comments made by Erdoğan blaming New Zealand for the anti-Muslim attack and was “alert” to the risk of reprisals. “We are taking care to be alert to all kinds of conversations and that will inform our deployment,” Bush said. “What I can say at the moment most positively is there was only one attacker. The investigation focus is to work out if anyone else was involved in supporting or in any other way and we are still conducting that part of the investigation.”

Since the weekend, the Turkish leader has been using clips of the Christchurch attack to denounce Islamophobia during campaign rallies, as he tries to stoke nationalist and religious sentiments ahead of 31 March local elections. The video, which was blurred but had clear sounds of automatic gunfire, has been shown to thousands of people at the rallies and aired live on Turkish television, despite efforts by New Zealand to halt its spread. The video prompted widespread condemnation. Facebook said it removed 1.5m versions of the video in the first 24 hours after the attack. Turkey’s main opposition party has also criticised Erdoğan for showing the clip “for the sake of [winning] three or five votes” at the elections...
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/mar/20/erdogans-gallipoli-threat-over-christchurch-attack-condemned

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