The Phnom Penh Post

RFA disavows fake page

-

Cambodians “because people think the CNRP has internal conflict”, he said.

RFA’s deputy director Chun Chanboth Vuthy Huot saw the Facebook post early Sunday morning and notified his staff that morning, Yeang added.

Those responsibl­e for the status update did not hack into RFA’s Facebook account, but instead “copied the format of the page and posted” their own content, according to Yeang.

“We don’t know where came from,” he said.

In response, RFA published an article on its website to notify its audience that the status update did not come from them. “We just want our readers and listeners to know about this,” Yeang said. “We are afraid that people are confused.”

So-called fake news has risen to internatio­nal prominence over the past year, in no small part due to its proliferat­ion during the US presidenti­al elections last year. The phenomenon has forced traditiona­l media outlets to take note, and distributo­rs of media – like Facebook – to consider safeguards against its spread.

Vanaka Chhem-Kieth, a lecturer at Paññasastr­a University and co-founder of the political discussion group Politikoff­ee, described fabricated news as “part of the media today” and not just a local or regional problem. However, in Cambodia, he said, “there is a difference in terms of the it impact fake news can have”, compared to countries with higher informatio­n literacy.

“The potential consequenc­es for fake news related to sensitive issues can be huge,” he said, referring to 2003 Phnom Penh riots sparked when Cambodian media spread rumours a Thai actress had denigrated Angkor Wat. “That spread back in the day where social media was virtually nonexisten­t.”

Benjamin Ismail, head of Reporters Without Borders’ AsiaPacifi­c desk, agreed that such disinforma­tion is not unique to Cambodia. “In many countries in East and Southeast Asia, government propaganda and pro-government comments are circulatin­g widely on social media as well as in the comment sections of independen­t and opposition news websites,” he said.

Ismail also cautioned against the use of the term “fake news”, which he said invites government censorship.

Ultimately, “government­s or their henchmen benefit from the spread of false news”, because “after they are officially debunked, they can jump in and say that such false informatio­n is the reason why they need to regulate online content, social media and even traditiona­l press”, he said.

CPP spokesman Sok Eysan yesterday encouraged RFA to take action against the perpetrato­rs. “RFA should file a complaint to find out who did this fake news,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia