The Borneo Post

Virus misinforma­tion fuels panic in Asia

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HONG KONG: False alerts about a man shot dead at a coronaviru­s checkpoint, old footage of a supermarke­t stampede in reports of panic buying, and a 2015 video of a police raid on a brothel recirculat­ed with a misleading claim.

A deluge of online misinforma­tion and hoaxes during the coronaviru­s crisis is stoking fear and confusion across Asia, where violators of lockdown rules can face jail and hefty fines in some countries.

AFP has produced more than 150 lockdown-related misinforma­tion reports across the region since February, when government­s beyond China began introducin­g restrictio­ns to curb the spread of Covid-19.

The hoaxes are created by a wide array of people with varying motives – from those looking to discredit government­s and deepen religious divides, to pranksters – and then shared widely as fact.

In April, a hoax was shared on Facebook in the Philippine­s post its lockdown suggesting a motorcycli­st had been shot dead for ignoring a virus checkpoint.

In fact, the footage – which was viewed tens of thousands of times in multiple posts – was of a police training drill.

Some users were outraged, and questioned the purportedl­y fatal use of force by the police, which

(Misinforma­tion) has fuelled a lot of uncertaint­y and anxiety among people. Yvonne Chua

has long been accused of human rights abuses and led President Rodrigo Duterte’s controvers­ial war on drugs.

But others suggested the man had been ‘hard-headed’ and was justly punished for stubbornly ignoring the checkpoint, echoing the types of sentiments from Duterte’s supporters who have cheered on the thousands of drug war deaths.

Other misinforma­tion circulated in the Philippine­s has included doctored advisories about lockdown extensions and false posts about antigovern­ment protesters flouting gathering bans.

Elsewhere in Asia, a Facebook post in Thailand included a video purporting to show panicked buyers scrambling for goods in Malaysia after it implemente­d a strict lockdown.

Thai Facebook users – who viewed the video hundreds of thousands of times – shared it with comments expressing worry there would be similar scenes in Thailand. The clip, in fact, showed shoppers in Brazil on Black Friday, an annual day of sales, in November 2019. “(Misinforma­tion) has fuelled a lot of uncertaint­y and anxiety among people,” said Yvonne Chua, an associate professor of journalism at the University of the Philippine­s.

The online mayhem has taken a greater hold when government­s have communicat­ed poorly, according to Axel Bruns, a media professor at the Queensland University of Technology in Australia.

“It seems to me the more effective government communicat­ion has been about lockdowns, but really about all aspects of their coronaviru­s response, the less foothold there has been for mis- and disinforma­tion,” Bruns said.

In Thailand, where movement restrictio­ns were imposed in March, anxiety spread over misleading messages saying people who did not wear face masks in public would be fined 200 Thai baht (US$6).

The misinforma­tion quickly spread on Facebook, Twitter and the messaging app Line, and Thai police were forced to refute the claim in a press conference.

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