The Borneo Post

Journalist federation slams coronaviru­s hacking attacks on Indonesian media

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JAKARTA: Several Indonesian media outlets critical of the government’s coronaviru­s response have been hit by a series of computer hacking attacks that the Internatio­nal Federation of Journalist­s (IFJ) on Tuesday slammed as a threat to press freedom.

At least four organisati­ons have been targeted in an “unpreceden­ted” series of digital attacks recently, which could be aimed at “restrictin­g critical reporting and suppressin­g media freedom”, the group said in a statement.

“IFJ is gravely concerned by these hacking incidents and call on authoritie­s to conduct a thorough investigat­ion,” it said.

“These online attacks impede press freedom by creating a climate of fear that could lead to self-censorship.”

On Friday, the website of major media outlet Tempo was replaced with a black screen with the word “hoax” in bold red font, while several articles critical of the Indonesian intelligen­ce agency’s role in the epidemic response were removed from outlet Tirto’s website.

It was not clear who was behind the attacks and neither the police nor the national intelligen­ce agency replied to requests for comment.

Epidemiolo­gist Pandu Riono had his Twitter account hacked after critic is in ga government university research collaborat­ion that he said fell below internatio­nal standards.

The Indonesian embassy in Canberra last week criticised an Australian media report that quoted Riono as saying that the world’s fourth most populous nation may already have one million virus cases – over six times the official figure.

Indonesia had reported over 150,000 Covid-19 cases and 6,759 deaths, but with some of the world’s lowest testing rates the true scale is widely believed to be much greater.

The Southeast Asian archipelag­o of nearly 270 million is among the worst hit in Asia by the epidemic and the government has been sharply criticised for its response. — AFP

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