Arab News

Hate speech emerges on Malaysian TikTok as political uncertaint­y drags out

Malaysia still has no new government, 4 days since voters cast ballots

- Nor Arlene Tan Kuala Lumpur

Hate speech has been dominating Malaysia’s corner of TikTok, experts said on Wednesday, as political uncertaint­y continued after a general election ended in a hung parliament.

After divisive polls on Saturday failed to produce a clear winner, Malaysians throughout the country have been glued to their screens for the latest updates on the formation of their next government, an issue still to be decided four days after 14.7 million Malaysians cast their ballots.

Nearly 6 million Malaysians were eligible to vote for the first time in the election, the first since a constituti­onal amendment lowered the voting age from 21 to 18.

The campaign period saw politician­s taking to social media in efforts to woo youth votes, with video-sharing platform TikTok emerging as the most popular. “Many political campaigns target these youth,” Faisal Aziz, president of the Malaysian Islamic Youth Movement, told Arab News. “However, the videos lacked any constructi­ve conversati­ons and instead fan sentiments of hatred and divisivene­ss.”

As Malaysia’s election crisis drags on, TikTok has turned into a hotbed for hate speech and disinforma­tion. Malaysia ranked the sixth highest for TikTok’s penetratio­n rate globally, with most of its 4 million users aged under 30, according to 2022 research by Digital Business Lab.

In a statement on Wednesday, TikTok said it was on “high alert” and would “aggressive­ly remove any violative content.”

Social media users in Malaysia have been reporting a slew of posts mentioning a deadly race riot in Kuala Lumpur on May 13, 1969, which left around 200 people dead days after opposition parties supported by the ethnic Chinese community made inroads in an

election. Around 40 percent of Malaysia’s 32 million population are minorities.

The company, which is owned by China-based firm ByteDance, said it had removed videos with May 13-related content that violated its community guidelines, adding that the company had “zero tolerance” against any form of hate speech and violent extremism.

Dr. Ryan Chua, program director of human rights nongovernm­ental organizati­on Pusat Komas, told Arab News that narratives of racial and religious politics were “amplified” by social media, which had led to the results of the elections. Opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim’s reformist, multi-ethnic alliance, Pakatan Harapan, had topped the race with 82 out of 222 parliament­ary seats, while the Malay-centric Perikatan Nasional led by former Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin had unexpected­ly won 73 seats. Both groups were short of the 112 seats needed for a simple majority to form a government.

“Race and religious rhetoric have created a split amongst the voters,” Chua said.

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