In mid-October, an anonymous social media account called “Missie Moustass” released 107 wiretapped recordings exposing alleged collusion and nepotism within the Mauritius governing party, the Militant Socialist Movement (MSM). The MSM party leader, Pravind Jugnauth, was seeking another term as prime minister since being appointed in 2017 after the resignation of his father, Anerood Jugnauth, and winning the elections in 2019. However, the Alliance Lepep, led by the MSM, lost to the opposition coalition Alliance du Changement, a mix of labor and environmental movements. The leaks by Missie Moustass and the reactions to it, highlight the growing influence of social media in shaping political engagement in Mauritius.
The Missie Moustass tapes implicated governmental officials, members of the judiciary, police officials, media professionals, and even Jugnauth and his wife, Kobita Jugnauth. Initially published on Facebook, the videos were quickly taken down but reposted on TikTok and YouTube.
One leak suggests that the Police Commissioner was involved in covering up the murder in 2023 of a Creole man, Jacquelin Juliette, due to police brutality. The last tapes prominently featured Kobita Jugnauth, often referred to as the one “running the political kitchen” (internal political decisions), revealing her alleged interference in political appointments based on ethnicity, religion, and political alliance.
In another leaked conversation, Kobita Jugnauth expressed contempt for Creole communities–those identifying with African ancestry—for singing the national anthem at events such as concerts. Sarcastically, she accused Creoles of “appropriating” the flag, claiming that “the national anthem is now only for Creoles… they [Creoles] have become more ‘Mauritian’ than Mauritians,” drawing a comparison to Indo-Mauritians. Her remark seemed to be that Creoles singing the national anthem in public spaces, somehow cheapened its solemnity. Such rhetoric also reflects the dynamics of Mauritius’ communalist political landscape, where the majority maintains power and defines legitimacy through ethnic tensions and hierarchies. In the Mauritian context, the combination of anti-Blackness and Hindu hegemony fuels communal divides, often reproduced through divisive and harmful narratives such as this one. Kobita’s criticism dismisses the legitimacy of Creoles as equal participants in the nation’s history and nation-building and strikes a nerve among many.
Social media became the main platform where Mauritians expressed anger and frustration about the MSM through memes and posts shaming, critiquing, and mocking the Jugnauths and the MSM. Some memes were purely satirical, while others touched on serious issues such as anti-Blackness, communalism, misogyny, and homophobia among Alliance Lepep and the wider Mauritian society.