Myanmar’s hardline monks plan to dodge bans on Facebook and keep using it to “tell the truth,” they said on Friday, after the social media giant barred several Buddhist nationalists for hate messages targeting Rohingya Muslims.
UN officials investigating a possible genocide in Myanmar have said Facebook has been a source of propaganda against the minority in a country where it has become a near-ubiquitous communications tool as the economy opens up.
Myanmar’s nationalist monks and activists, who have emerged as a political force in the past few years, have been sharing violent and angry rhetoric on Facebook targeting the minority, seen by many in the Buddhist-majority country as illegal immigrants.
“It is a violation of freedom of expression,” Thuseitta, a member of the Patriotic Myanmar Monks’ Union said hours after Facebook identified him as a “hate figure.”
“We will keep using Facebook with different names and accounts to tell the truth to people.”
Nearly 700,000 Rohingya Muslims have fled to neighboring Bangladesh, the UN and aid agencies have said, following an army crackdown after Rohingya insurgent attacks last August.
Washington has called the army response “ethnic cleansing” — a charge Myanmar denies, saying its security forces have been waging a legitimate counter-insurgency operation against “Bengali terrorists.”
Pinnyawenta, another monk from the union whose account was last month deactivated after repeatedly being asked by Facebook to remove some posts, said he had registered again under another name and would “continue to write about the truth” on the site.
In an e-mail, Facebook said that it was “investing more in the teams who are working on Myanmar” as it seeks to “understand and respond to Myanmar’s unique technical challenges.”
“There’s always more we can do to get ahead of these repeat offenders, and we are committed to improving our detection tools to remove them from Facebook as quickly as possible,” the company said.
The California-based company would invest more in artificial intelligence to deal with languages in Myanmar, it said.
Facebook added that it had designated as “hate figures and organizations” a radical Buddhist group, Ma Ba Tha, and several prominent monks known for vitriol towards Rohingya, blocking them from the platform.
The move had led to the removal of “a lot of harmful and violating content,” it said.
Ei Myat Noe Khin, a manager of Yangon-based Phandeeyar, which helped Facebook translate its Burmese-language community standards, urged the company to hire more people who are unbiased and understand Myanmar well.
That would be the only way for Facebook to tackle the proliferating accounts behind the rumors spread to trigger violence, riots and conflict, she added.
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