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  • Dictators And Their Families Seek Out New Friends Among The Twittera

    DICTATORS AND THEIR FAMILIES SEEK OUT NEW FRIENDS AMONG THE TWITTERATI

    The Times (London)
    February 12, 2013 Tuesday
    Edition 1; Ireland

    It's human nature: every dictator wants to be liked and is flattered
    by attracting new followers.

    Little wonder, then, that an order has gone round Azerbaijan's Ministry
    of Economic Development this week to press the "Like" icon on the
    Facebook page of President Aliyev. Or as those on Twitter know him,
    @presidentaz.

    Autocrats of the world are uniting around the idea that they should
    be using their thumbs to woo social media.

    Partly out of vanity (you don't need the secret police to tell you how
    many followers you have accumulated), partly to wrongfoot a virtual
    opposition that is building up as internet usage expands, leaders
    such as the Chechen strongman Ramzan Kadyrov, Rwanda's Paul Kagame
    and Iran's Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, have become players.

    Even the First Families have become involved.

    Gulnara Karimova, the daughter of President Karimov of Uzbekistan -
    reputed to have boiled alive two of his critics, an old-fashioned way
    of unfollowing - is a passionate user of Instagram. Most recently she
    tweeted pictures of herself in yoga positions wearing tight gym gear.

    That's @gulnarakarimova.

    Parody accounts abound, naturally, but these new social media entrants
    are the real thing.

    @Posts photos The Chechen leader, known for his robust approach to
    critics, reveals an almost poetic side that could not possibly have
    been dreamt up by a social media adviser. "Grozny at night is so
    beautiful," he tweeted under @RKadyrov, writing in Russian. "I rode
    through the streets. I sat at a cafe. I had a sausage and pasta.

    Aromatic Kalmyk tea with milk. I recommend it."

    Ayatollah Khamenei has a cyberspace expert, who says that the Supreme
    Leader's Facebook page was set up by fans. But he has been posting
    personal black and white photos from the 1970s that could only have
    come from his mantlepiece.

    It is not exactly revealing, but it wasn't so long ago that the
    Iranian authorities were denouncing Facebook as a wicked Zionist tool.

    Mr Aliyev has a two-pronged strategy.

    On Facebook he is Mr Nice Guy, posing around the world with his
    glamorous wife, Mehriban, (@aboutfirstlady), but on Twitter he can
    snarl. "Armenia as a country is of no value," he tweeted last November
    to howls of protest from his neighbour. "It is actually a colony,
    an outpost run from abroad, a territory."

    As of last night the President had 35,604 Twitter followers (not many,
    presumably, from Armenia) and follows only two accounts: his office
    and himself.

    It is the gaffes - the embarrassed retreats - that show that there
    is a real person at the other end of the smartphone.

    In between postings about yoga and her social life, one Twitter
    follower asked Ms Karimova what she thought about reports of torture
    in Uzbek prisons.

    Back came the reply: "MAY I HAVE a FIRM PRECISE CASSES to look at to
    get equinted with it and to talk to you then. email:[email protected]"
    She never did get back.


    From: Baghdasarian
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