Asia cracks down on virus 'fake news'
Asia cracks down on virus 'fake news'
Since the virus crisis began, there
has been an online flood of dangerous fake cures and conspiracy theories that
the WHO has called an 'infodemic'
Hundreds of people have been arrested across Asia for posting
purported false coronavirus information, according to an AFP investigation,
deepening concerns that growing government efforts to combat "fake
news" will target the wrong people and silence dissent.
From teenagers to a TV star, people have been wrongly detained
under vaguely worded cybercrime laws or broad state-of-emergency powers ushered
in since the outbreak began, rights groups say.
"Governments are using the 'fake news' label to dress up
their rights-abusing efforts to censor views and statements that are at odds
with whatever strategy they have taken to deal with the COVID-19 crisis,"
said Phil Robertson, Asia deputy director for Human Rights Watch (HRW).
"It's insane frankly. In many cases it's people being
dragged out of their homes to the lock-up, put in pre-trial detention, in
crowded spaces where they're more likely to get COVID."
At least 266 people have been arrested for posting
coronavirus-related information in 10 Asian countries, from Thailand to India
and Mongolia, according to an AFP tally based on police reports.
They include a local politician in India who claimed on Facebook
that the government was downplaying virus fatalities, and a Malaysian TV
personality made to pay a fine of several thousand US dollars after he posted a
YouTube video criticising a hospital's handling of the pandemic.
Authorities say criminalisation is needed to curb the online
flood of dangerous fake cures and conspiracy theories that the World Health
Organization has called an "infodemic".
But HRW and other campaigners point to cases where opposition
figures or journalists have been targeted -- as well as questioning the
fairness of arresting ordinary people who may not even realise they are spreading
misinformation.
A middle-aged woman in Sri Lanka spent three days in custody
this week after posting a prank message on Facebook saying the president had
tested positive for COVID-19, police said.
In Cambodia, a Facebook pundit who posted a quote from Prime
Minister Hun Sen was charged with incitement to commit felony and is facing up
to two years in jail, according to a court warrant seen by AFP.
Officials say Hun Sen was joking when he told motorbike taxi
drivers to sell their vehicles if they cannot make money in the pandemic.
- 'Rumour mongering' -
Cambodian authorities have also detained four opposition
politicians, according to HRW, while a local rights group and police sources
said a 14-year-old girl was among more than a dozen people arrested. She was
released soon after questioning with no charges.
The surge in arrests in Asia focused on coronoavirus
misinformation has come after various countries toughened laws or introduced
new ones on so-called fake news.
"Regulating misinformation by either introducing new
legislation or by expanding the scope of existing laws has been the trend in
Asia for the last few years," said Masato Kajimoto, a journalism
researcher at the University of Hong Kong.
The pandemic has accelerated this because a crackdown can be
perceived as protecting public health, rather than infringing on freedom of
speech, he said.
In Thailand, a state-of-emergency decree passed in late March
criminalised sharing misinformation online about COVID-19 that could
"instigate fear".
This is on top of the Computer Crimes Act, which has a five-year
maximum jail penalty and is often used to stifle dissent online.
The Philippines also recently adopted an emergency law giving it
more powers to combat the pandemic, including arresting people who share false
information about the disease.
Nearly 100 people in India have been arrested for spreading
virus misinformation under existing penal laws and the disaster management act
-- with punishments including up to one year in prison.
"While India lacks any specific fake news law, there do
exist provisions of laws that can be used for 'rumour mongering'," said
Apar Gupta, director of the Delhi-based Internet Freedom Foundation.
"It is fair to state that these laws are broadly phrased
and can result in arbitrary action, given India's slow judicial system that
also generally displays a prosecutorial bias," he said.
Karuna Nandy, an Indian Supreme Court lawyer, told AFP that such
arrests were particularly alarming in a lockdown, when courts are mostly shut.
- Hoax confusion -
In Singapore, an anti-government website was blocked earlier
this year under the city-state's controversial and sweeping new
anti-misinformation law, passed in October.
Authorities accused the States Times Review of circulating
falsehoods including about the coronavirus outbreak.
Police in neighbouring Indonesia have made more than 80 arrests
under the country's strict electronic information law since the outbreak began.
The maximum penalty is five years in jail.
They include individuals accused of attacking the government and
its response to the outbreak, and multiple people who shared claims that a
Muslim woman had died suddenly from COVID-19 at Jakarta's international
airport.
Damar Juniarto, from digital rights group SAFEnet, said
Indonesian law gives "no clear definition" of a hoax, which can be
spread by accident.
"The source of the problem is that there is no information
leadership from the government," said Juniarto. Indonesia's doctors
association has warned that the crisis there is worse than officially reported.
HRW's Robertson echoed this sentiment. "People should not
be criminalised for saying what they think online. It's up to the governments
to provide effective information".
burs-kaf/kma
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