Coronavirus sends Asia's social media censors into overdrive
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[February 04, 2020]
By Matthew Tostevin and John Geddie
BANGKOK/SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Deluged by
misinformation about the new coronavirus on social media, some Asian
governments are fighting back with arrests, fines and fake news laws -
something free speech advocates fear will entrench measures that can
also silence dissent.
At least 16 people have been arrested over coronavirus posts in
Malaysia, India, Thailand, Indonesia and Hong Kong, while Singapore has
used its controversial new "fake news" law, POFMA, to force media
outlets and social media users to carry government warnings on their
posts and articles saying they contain falsehoods.
"Fortunately, we now have POFMA to deal with these fake news," said
Lawrence Wong, one of the ministers heading a Singapore government task
force to halt the spread of the virus.
Many details of the new flu-like coronavirus that surfaced just weeks
ago in the Chinese city of Wuhan are unknown. As the death toll has
passed 420, anxiety has been fuelled by social media posts ranging from
the bizarre to the malicious.
Posts include speculation about how the virus can be caught - through a
video game according to one - or avoided - a government minister in
Myanmar was rebuked for sharing a post that recommended eating more
onions - to local scares of deaths or anti-Chinese attacks.
"What I call the 'moron strain' has created a global, social
media-driven panic that is in turn feeding on itself," wrote Karim
Raslan in his regionally syndicated column, noting how much greater the
challenge had become for governments to manage.
At least five people were arrested and released on bail in India's
southwestern state of Kerala over WhatsApp messages, said Aadhithya R,
District Police Chief of Thrissur. Six people were arrested in Malaysia
on suspicion of spreading false news.
In Vietnam, where an army of cyber-censors tracks social media comment
for the communist government, at least nine people have been fined and
three celebrities asked to explain their actions over posts about
coronavirus.
Thailand hailed the success of an "anti-fake news centre" it set up last
year. Dozens of staff reviewed nearly 7,600 posts in four days from Jan.
25 - leading to 22 posts being highlighted as false on its website and
two arrests under computer crimes laws.
"The anti-fake news centre is working intensively to verify these
rumours and communicating truth to the people," said Digital Minister
Puttipong Punnakanta.
Thailand is among countries where laws on social media posts have been
toughened in recent years despite complaints from human rights groups
that they could be used to target government opponents.
CONTROL
Free-speech advocates are wary that the campaign against coronavirus
could help governments extend their control as well as damaging the
health campaign.
"Criminalisation of speech, even if targeted at falsehoods, is highly
likely to stifle the real time sharing of information that is essential
during epidemics," said Matthew Bugher, Head of Asia Programme for free
expression campaign group Article 19.
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Security personell attempt to prevent the photographer from taking
pictures at a checkpoint at the Jiujiang Yangtze River Bridge as the
country is hit by an outbreak of the novel coronavirus, in Jiujiang,
Jiangxi province, China, February 4, 2020. REUTERS/Thomas Peter
China has long censored social media heavily and some critics say
that may have delayed information on the emerging virus in Wuhan -
and therefore potential countermeasures.
Eight people were arrested after being accused of spreading rumours
about illness in early January, but the case was dropped last week
amid growing public anger over the handling of the new crisis.
Meanwhile, Tencent Holdings' <0700.HK> ubiquitous messaging app
WeChat has added tools to help debunk virus rumours. The official
People's Daily has also introduced a tool to help people verify
reports.
Western social media companies are also stepping up action. Facebook
Inc <FB.O> has said it would take down misinformation about the
coronavirus - a rare departure from the usual approach to health
content by the world's biggest social network.
GOVERNMENT THREATS
Taiwan has warned of punishment for spreading disinformation. South
Korean police were working with telecoms regulators to block "false
information", Yonhap news agency said.
Indonesian police said two people had been arrested for spreading
fake news and face charges that could see them jailed for up to five
years. Hong Kong police said a shopping mall security guard was
arrested for spreading false news about infections.
In Singapore, some said the government was using its new fake news
law responsibly.
"Many examples of misinformation, confusing data and outright fake
news present a clear and present danger to public safety, health and
security," said Nicholas Fang, founder of Singapore consultancy
Black Dot Research.
But not all were convinced.
Journalist and activist Kirsten Han is among those who have been
given a government correction notice - in her case for sharing an
article related to state executions last month rather than anything
to do with coronavirus.
"Just because there are relatively more justifiable uses of a #fakenews
law, it doesn't mean that the law was well-drafted and can't be an
instrument of abuse and oppression," she commented on Twitter.
(Reporting by Matthew Tostevin in Bangkok and John Geddie in
Singapore; Additional reporting by Jessica Damiana, Keira Wright and
Stanley Widianto in Jakarta, Joseph Sipalan in Kuala Lumpur,
Patpicha Tanakasempipat in Bangkok, Ben Blanchard in Taipei, Josh
Smith in Seoul, Chris Thomas in Bengaluru, James Pearson in Hanoi,
Tony Munroe in Beijing, Brenda Goh in Shanghai; Editing by Alex
Richardson)
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