Indian Police have arrested three suspects in an investigation into an online app that shared pictures of more than a hundred Muslim women for an “auction” in another case of hatred towards the minority community.
In recent weeks, several Indian Muslim women said on social media that their pictures had been used without their consent to create an open-source app on the Microsoft-owned open software development platform, GitHub. The app was called “Bulli Bai”, a derogatory term to describe Muslim women.

The cybercrime division of Mumbai Police on Wednesday morning arrested Mayank Rawal, 21, from the northern state of Uttarakhand.
Rawal is the third person arrested in the case after Vishal Kumar, a 21-year-old engineering student, and Shweta Singh, an 19-year-old woman suspected by the police to be the main accused.
Kumar was arrested in the southern tech hub of Bengaluru, Mumbai police officials said on Tuesday, while Singh was picked up from Uttarakhand.
In a police complaint filed on Sunday, Ismat Ara, a New Delhi-based journalist targeted by the app for online “auction”, said it was an attempt to harass Muslim women.

A complainant, Ara said that the GitHub is violent, threatening, and intending to create a feeling of fear and shame in my mind, as well as in the minds of women in general, and the Muslim community whose women are being targeted in this hateful manner.
India’s Information Technology Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw said GitHub had confirmed blocking the user who created “Bulli Bai” app.
The app came just six months after a similar app called “Sulli Deals” offered for online sale 80 Indian Muslim women. So far, no arrests have yet been made in the “Sulli Deals” case in India.
