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Related: About this forumMyanmar women target of online abuse by pro-military social media
Myanmar women target of online abuse by pro-military social media
Women were subjected to doxxing and threatened for expressing views opposing military rule with their online abusers calling for off-line punishment by authorities.
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A police officer who fled Myanmar following a military coup looks at her phone at an undisclosed location bordering Myanmar, in the northeastern Indian state of Mizoram, Thursday, March 18, 2021. Villagers in Mizoram have given shelter to 34 Myanmar police personnel and 1 fire fighter, who crossed over to the state over the last two weeks. Those who escaped spend their time watching local television and doing daily chores. Some of them have carried mobile phones and are trying to connect to families they were forced to leave behind. At night, all of them go to sleep on mattresses laid on the floor of a single room. (AP Photo/Anupam Nath)
By Al Jazeera Staff
Published On 26 Jan 202326 Jan 2023
Women who have expressed views on social media opposing military rule in Myanmar are being subjected to abuse, including calls for their arrest and threats of violence, rape and death by pro-military online users, a study has found. Myanmar Witness, an organisation that led the study, said social media platforms such as Telegram and Facebook were not doing enough to tackle online abuse or were not responding quickly enough to requests to remove abusive users and content.
Politically motivated abuse against women from and in Myanmar increased at least fivefold in the aftermath of the militarys seizure of power in February 2021, according to the study, and the prevalence of abusive posts targeting women was 500 times higher on Telegram compared with other international social media companies. The overwhelming majority of abusive posts were authored by male-presenting profiles supportive of Myanmars military coup and targeted women who opposed the coup, Myanmar Witness said in the report released on Wednesday. Online abuse and doxxing attacks are having a silencing effect and causing women to retreat from public life, the report said. Survivors report attacks on their views, person and dignity, and threats of rape, death and violence with severe emotional and psychological impacts, it said.
Doxxing the release of peoples private details online without their consent, such as their home address, contact details and personal photos was the main form of abuse found in the study, which involved 1.6 million Telegram posts as well as case studies and interviews with those targeted by politically motivated abuse online. The women subjected to doxing appeared to have been singled out for having commented positively on groups in Myanmar that oppose military rule, such as the shadow National Unity Government, which includes former democratically elected legislators, and the Peoples Defence Force (PDF), which has taken up arms to fight military rule. According to the study, 28% of all doxxing posts analysed in the qualitative study include an explicit call for the targeted women to be punished offline. Almost all of these called on Myanmar military authorities to arrest the targeted woman and/or seize her property, it said.
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The reports authors said social media platforms need to be more accountable, should work with womens rights organisations in Myanmar and devote more resources to monitoring the local language content they host. Platforms should also make data accessible to those affected by online abuse so they can track such content and the effectiveness of countermeasures taken by social media firms, the authors wrote. Social media companies also need to improve their response times when abuse and threats are reported and must quickly remove abusive accounts when threatening activity is flagged, the Myanmar Witness said. In an update added to the report, the organisation said Telegram and Meta appeared to have removed the majority of abusive posts and channels identified during this investigation as of Wednesday.
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2023/1/26/myanmar-women-target-of-online-abuse-by-pro-military-social-media