MYANMAR YOUTH FIGHT BACK WITH NEWSLETTER
‘Molotov’ distributed secretly to circumvent junta’s Internet shutdown
MYANMAR youth are fighting the junta’s Internet shutdown and information suppression with an explosive underground printed newsletter they are secretly distributing.
For 56 days, there have been Internet outages in Myanmar, said monitoring group NetBlocks.
The country has been in turmoil since democratically-elected leader Aung San Suu Kyi was ousted in a Feb 1 coup, triggering a mass uprising that has resulted in a brutal security crackdown and more than 700 civilian deaths.
Lynn Thant (not his real name), 30, began the newsletter and gave it the edgy name Molotov to appeal to young people.
“This is our response to those who slow down the flow of information, and that’s a threat to us.”
Thousands of readers across the country are downloading the PDF version of the publication and printing out and distributing physical copies across neighbourhoods
here, in Mandalay and other areas.
Lynn Thant is aware of the risks involved.
Police and soldiers have arrested more than 3,000 people since the putsch, according to local monitoring group Assistance Association for Political Prisoners.
About 180 high profile celebrities, including actors, singers and social media influencers, are on an arrest warrant list and face three years’ jail if convicted of spreading dissent against the military.
“If we write revolutionary literature and distribute it like this, we could end up in prison for many years,” he said, his face concealed
by one of the Guy Fawkes masks popularised by the dystopian movie V for Vendetta.
“Even if one of us is arrested, there are young people who will carry on producing the Molotov newsletter. Even if one of us is killed, someone else will come up when someone falls. This Molotov newsletter will continue to exist until the revolution is successful.”
He said the publication had a reach of more than 30,000 people on Facebook and the main audience was Generation Z activists.
Copies of the newsletter are also being distributed under the radar at produce markets.