Bid to silence govt critics draws ire


THE government is taking an “authoritarian” turn under President Prabowo Subianto, allowing disinformation to dis­credit critics and justify rep­­ression, Amnesty International said.

In a report bearing the title Building up Imaginary Enemies, the rights watchdog highlighted a trend of branding critics “foreign agents”.

One of them, Indonesian rights activist Andrie Yunus, became the victim in March of an acid attack that left him blind in one eye.

Andrie, 27, has been a vocal critic of what many perceive as the military’s expanding role in government, and was attacked shortly after recording a podcast on the topic.

Amnesty said its investigations found “a growing pattern in which Indonesian authorities –including the military – deploy online disinformation to target journalists, activists, academics and protesters in retaliation for their legitimate activism and expression”.

It also alleged tech companies Meta, TikTok, X and YouTube “have allowed harmful disinformation to remain online”.

The report said Prabowo and senior officials have repeatedly accused critics of being paid, manipulated or controlled by foreign interests, claims then amplified on social media with posts branding people “foreign agents”.

Online slurs sometimes prece­ded violent attacks such as the one on Andrie, said Amnesty.

“Authoritarian practices have accelerated in Indonesia under President Prabowo Subianto’s government, said an Amnesty press statement.

“In the 18 months since Prabowo took power, online dis­information has emerged as a key tactic to systematically discredit government critics, shut down public debate and justify repression,” it added.

And this while “social media companies sit back and let it ­happen”.

AFP has requested comment from the government and tech companies, but they still have to review the report.

In replies published in the Amnesty report, TikTok insisted it was working with “global safety partners” on content mode­ration, while Meta said it conti­nued to update its annual human rights reporting.

Meta and TikTok pay AFP to fact-check posts with potentially false information.

Amnesty International regional researcher Chanatip Tatiya­ka­roon­wong said the report iden­tified state actors involved in spreading false “foreign agent” claims, including members of Prabowo’s Gerindra party and at least one member of the presi­dential staff.

“Under international human rights law, the government has an obligation to refrain from spreading disinformation, to prevent state actors from doing so and to stop and address such campaigns when they occur,” added Chanatip.

“That failure to uphold the human rights of those targeted with these disinformation campaigns is what we are holding the government responsible for,” he said. — AFP

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Aseanplus News

Probe begins solar winds mission
Bodies of two Italian divers recovered
Gunmen kill cops guarding polio workers
Beijing rolls out action plan to boost employment
Rescue bid ends in deaths of five in river
Takaichi, Lee build bridges
Xi set to host ‘old friend’ Putin
Durian standards tightened to boost competitiveness
Potential NATO mission in strait of Hormuz is political decision, top commander says
Trump says US may need to hit Iran again

Others Also Read