Connect with us

Entertainment

‘Selfie with the dead’ has police worried

Published

on

The internet social networking though has been a helpful trend over the years, but the good has also brought with it the bad and the ugly. This time around an ugly trend has the police worried as people have started taking selfies with dead people and posting the pictures to win cash prizes for the best photo.
Below is the full story from Mirror:
A sick social media craze where people are encouraged to pose for selfies with dead people is being probed by police.
‘Selfie with the Deceased’ even hands out cash prizes for the best picture with a corpse – with £50 recently offered for a pic with the body of a 13-year-old girl killed in a car crash.
The twisted fad is encouraged by a group on Russian social media site VK which is now being investigated by the authorities, a spokesman in the northern city of Syktyvkar told AFP.
The community’s administrators pledge to pay between 1,000 and 5,000 rubles (£10 – £50) for the best selfie with a corpse.
They say the selfie-taker should be smiling because the deceased “has gone to a better place”.
The community’s page is filled with photographs of people posing alongside dead bodies at funeral homes.
It was still available on VK as of Monday morning.
The community, which now has some 500 members, caught the attention of law enforcement after its administrator announced a 5,000-ruble cash prize for the best selfie with the body of a 13-year-old Syktyvkar girl killed in a car accident, a police spokesman said.
The family of the deceased teenager told local media they were afraid mobile phone cameras would start flashing at her funeral.
“We are working to elucidate the circumstances surrounding these reports and trying to determine whether one individual or a group of people are behind this,” Syktyvkar police spokesman Alexander Shidyusov told AFP.
Shidyusov said the investigation was still at an early stage and could not elaborate on the legal repercussions the community’s administrators could face.

Read also: Why you shouldn’t take notes with your laptop

The profile of the community’s main administrator, named as Alfred Polyakov, has been blocked for “suspicious activity”.
AFP managed to speak to Polyakov, with the help of another individual running the site.
Polyakov described himself as a 28-year-old university professor from Donetsk, the separatist-controlled city in eastern Ukraine.
He said he created the community a month ago.
“We created the group to change popular attitudes toward death,” Polyakov told AFP in a telephone interview. “Death is the start of a new life.”
AFP was not able to verify whether Polyakov was using his real name.
Younger Russians have embraced the selfie culture but sometimes with dubious or deadly results.
Last month, Russian police launched a campaign urging people to take safe selfies, with authorities reporting that dozens of people have been killed and hundreds more injured while striking high-risk poses.

 

RipplesNigeria… without borders, without fears.

Join the conversation

Opinions

Support Ripples Nigeria, hold up solutions journalism

Balanced, fearless journalism driven by data comes at huge financial costs.

As a media platform, we hold leadership accountable and will not trade the right to press freedom and free speech for a piece of cake.

If you like what we do, and are ready to uphold solutions journalism, kindly donate to the Ripples Nigeria cause.

Your support would help to ensure that citizens and institutions continue to have free access to credible and reliable information for societal development.

Donate Now