Governments across Southeast Asia are following China’s authoritarian censorship of the digital world to keep political dissent in check.
Vietnam, Myanmar, Thailand, Cambodia and the Philippines have all moved or are moving toward monitoring Internet use, blocking international sites regarded as critical and ruthlessly silencing Web dissidents.
In Vietnam, the Communist Party wants to be your “friend” on the state-run version of Facebook, provided you are willing to share all personal details.
Illustration: Yusha
In Myanmar, political unrest can be silenced by cutting off the country from the Internet.
In Thailand, Web site moderators can face decades in jail for a posted comment they did not even write if the government deems it injurious to the monarchy.
While much is made of China’s authoritarian attitude toward Internet access, a majority of Southeast Asian governments have similar controls and, rather than relaxing restrictions on Internet use, many are moving toward tighter regulation.
Five leading bloggers across the region spoke about the present restrictions they face, and future fears, for this report.
Raymond Palatino, a Filipino member of parliament and editor with Global Voices, said governments, in addition to crudely blocking Web sites, are starting to use arguments of morality and decency to censor access to information and quash criticism.
“There is direct censorship to block political dissent. You have repressive laws in Myanmar, in Vietnam, in Singapore. In fact, I think Vietnam is catching up with China in terms of building strong firewalls to prevent dissidents from accessing critical content on the Internet,” he said. “But we also see governments using the excuse of protecting the public morality in order to censor Internet content. Governments use the excuse of censoring pornography as a safe argument to make censorship acceptable to the public.”
More than a decade ago, former US president George W Bush asked people to “imagine if the Internet took hold in China. Imagine how freedom would spread.” However, rather than emerging as a catalyst for democracy, the Internet has become another way in which dissent is stifled.
Palatino sees governments using the Internet for their own selfish advantage.
“They are learning how to prevent people from using the Internet to criticize government. Instead of being a potent tool for empowering the people, the Internet will be in the hands of an authoritative, repressive government,” he said.
With a population of more than 600 million, Southeast Asia has about 123 million Internet users. However, penetration rates vary from 0.2 percent in Myanmar and East Timor to more than 80 percent in Brunei and 77 percent in Singapore. However, Southeast Asian use is still dwarfed by China’s 384 million users.
In the Philippines, cybercrime legislation before parliament would outlaw anything deemed obscene or indecent.
“The laws are deliberately broad and vague so they can be used to shut down anything subversive,” Palatino said.
Cambodia’s government is seeking to monitor all Internet use inside the country by appointing the state-owned telephone company to operate the sole Internet exchange.
Web sites will be monitored to filter out pornography, officials say, but opponents say sites critical of the government are also likely to be blocked.
In Thailand, century-old lese-majeste legislation is combined with new computer-related crime laws to mute criticism on the Web.
Lese-majeste laws — defaming the monarchy — are enforced inconsistently in Thailand, but wielded often enough, and against defendants of sufficient profile, to stifle almost any discussion of the monarchy’s role in a country riven by political factionalism.
Chiranuch Premchiaporn, the editor of Thailand’s English-language news Web site Prachatai.com, faces up to 70 years in jail for allowing the monarch to be insulted online.
The charges relate to five of 200 comments posted about an interview with a Thai man who was charged for refusing to stand for the anthem in a theater.
Premchiaporn, known as Jiew, did not write the comments, and pulled them from the Web site but, according to police, allowed them to stay up “longer than the appropriate period,” a period never defined by authorities before or since the charge.
Now on bail, the prospect of jail weighs heavily on her.
“And it isn’t just about ‘Oh, how long I will have to spend in the cell,’ my whole life is uncertain. I cannot plan my life because of this legal charge, it makes everything hard,” she said.
Thailand’s strict laws, and harsh punishments, have had a chilling effect on political discussion on Web boards and blogs.
“I think the biggest problem in Thai media is self-censorship ... but we started Prachatai for the ideals of believing in the rights of people to access information ... from many sources and not be dominated by just one source,” Jiew says.
Prachatai is blocked in Thailand, under order of the emergency decree after the Red Shirt uprising in May. It is one of more than 100,000 Web sites blocked in the country.
“We want to promote the rights of the people to speak up about their issues, not just only people who have a big name, or who are important in government,” Jiew said.
In Vietnam, Web-users can become “friends” with their communist government, joining the country’s own version of Facebook. A trial version of go.vn was launched in May. A full version is expected online by the end of the year.
The functions are familiar to those used in social networking. Users can update their status, post photos and links, and send messages back and forth.
There are news links, historical articles on founding father Ho Chi Minh and other revolutionary heroes, and members can also play state-approved network games. In one particularly violent example, players join a band of militants sworn to fight the spread of global capitalism.
The site is closely monitored by the government’s security services, and while, for many, the attraction of the Internet lies in its anonymity, to join go.vn users must submit their full names and state-issued identity numbers to the government.
The Vietnamese government says it expects to have 40 million users, half the country, in five years. Perhaps because Web dissidents are dealt with so ruthlessly by the communist regime — four bloggers were recently jailed for 16 years for anti--government posts — five months on, take-up of go.vn is just a few thousand.
Myanmar has one of the poorest records on Internet freedom in the region. All .mm sites and e-mail addresses are closely monitored by the ruling military junta, and international sites are banned, but the tiny Internet cafes that dot the former capital, Yangon, are adept at bypassing the government’s firewalls, using proxy servers to evade the censors and accessing banned sites.
Outfoxed on technology, the junta responds during times of stress by simply unplugging the Internet, especially to stop unwelcome news from getting out of the country.
At the height of the monk-led Saffron Revolution in 2007, the junta’s generals shut down access completely, later claiming a break in an underwater cable had cut the country off.
With Myanmar heading toward its first elections in a generation early next month, and the anticipated release of Nobel Peace Prize laureate Aung San Suu Kyi a week later, there is an expectation that the Web blackout may be repeated.
Saudi Arabian largesse is flooding Egypt’s cultural scene, but the reception is mixed. Some welcome new “cooperation” between two regional powerhouses, while others fear a hostile takeover by Riyadh. In Cairo, historically the cultural capital of the Arab world, Egyptian Minister of Culture Nevine al-Kilany recently hosted Saudi Arabian General Entertainment Authority chairman Turki al-Sheikh. The deep-pocketed al-Sheikh has emerged as a Medici-like patron for Egypt’s cultural elite, courted by Cairo’s top talent to produce a slew of forthcoming films. A new three-way agreement between al-Sheikh, Kilany and United Media Services — a multi-media conglomerate linked to state intelligence that owns much of
The US and other countries should take concrete steps to confront the threats from Beijing to avoid war, US Representative Mario Diaz-Balart said in an interview with Voice of America on March 13. The US should use “every diplomatic economic tool at our disposal to treat China as what it is... to avoid war,” Diaz-Balart said. Giving an example of what the US could do, he said that it has to be more aggressive in its military sales to Taiwan. Actions by cross-party US lawmakers in the past few years such as meeting with Taiwanese officials in Washington and Taipei, and
The Republic of China (ROC) on Taiwan has no official diplomatic allies in the EU. With the exception of the Vatican, it has no official allies in Europe at all. This does not prevent the ROC — Taiwan — from having close relations with EU member states and other European countries. The exact nature of the relationship does bear revisiting, if only to clarify what is a very complicated and sensitive idea, the details of which leave considerable room for misunderstanding, misrepresentation and disagreement. Only this week, President Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) received members of the European Parliament’s Delegation for Relations
Denmark’s “one China” policy more and more resembles Beijing’s “one China” principle. At least, this is how things appear. In recent interactions with the Danish state, such as applying for residency permits, a Taiwanese’s nationality would be listed as “China.” That designation occurs for a Taiwanese student coming to Denmark or a Danish citizen arriving in Denmark with, for example, their Taiwanese partner. Details of this were published on Sunday in an article in the Danish daily Berlingske written by Alexander Sjoberg and Tobias Reinwald. The pretext for this new practice is that Denmark does not recognize Taiwan as a state under