The Guardian (USA)

Facebook and YouTube accused of complicity in Vietnam repression

- Rebecca Ratcliffe South-east Asia correspond­ent

Facebook and YouTube are complicit in “censorship and repression on an industrial scale” in Vietnam, according to a report by Amnesty Internatio­nal that accuses the platforms of openly signalling that they are willing to bow to the wishes of authoritar­ian regimes.

Facebook’s executives have repeatedly promoted the platform as a bastion of “free expression”, but in Vietnam, where there is little tolerance for dissent, the company complied with hundreds of requests to censor content earlier this year. This includes peaceful criticism of the state by activists, which is protected under internatio­nal human rights law.

Vietnam is a lucrative market for both Facebook and Google, which owns YouTube. In 2018, Facebook’s income from the country was almost $1bn (£750m) – roughly one-third of all revenue from south-east Asia. Google earned $475m during the same period, thanks to YouTube advertisin­g.

“Facebook is by far the most popular and profitable platform in Vietnam,” said Ming Yu Hah, Amnesty Internatio­nal’s deputy regional director for campaigns, who added that businesses had a responsibi­lity to respect human rights wherever they operated.

“Today these platforms have become hunting grounds for censors, military cyber-troops and statespons­ored trolls. The platforms themselves are not merely letting it happen – they’re increasing­ly complicit,” she added.

In the first half of 2020, Facebook complied with 834 content restrictio­ns, according to its transparen­cy report – a huge rise on the previous sixmonth reporting period. According to Amnesty, the increase was partly driven by the authoritie­s’ efforts to silence any discussion of the Dong Tam land dispute, a high-profile clash over the military’s decision to build an airfield on land claimed by villagers.

In April, Facebook agreed to significan­tly increase its compliance with requests to geoblock content, following pressure from the Vietnamese government, which it said had deliberate­ly slowed traffic to the platform by taking its local servers offline. Amnesty said the decision could have “far-reaching global consequenc­es”, as other repressive government­s could adopt similar strategies.

In recent months, Facebook has also complied with requests from the Thai government, including by blocking access within Thailand to a popular group that featured criticism of the monarchy. The group, which had 1 million members, was taken down after the Thai government threatened Facebook with legal action.

In a statement, Facebook said that over the past few months it had faced additional pressure from Vietnam to restrict more content, but added: “We will do everything we can to ensure that our services remain available so people can continue to express themselves.”

Despite major economic reform in Vietnam, the ruling Communist party retains a tight grip on the media and severely restricts space for dissent and freedom of expression. The country ranks 175th out of 180 countries in the World Press Freedom Index.

Amnesty Internatio­nal said it had identified at least 170 prisoners of conscience – the highest number since the group began such monitoring in the country. Among them, 69 were imprisoned for posting content online.

Activists report harassment on social media and in real life. On top of the threat of imprisonme­nt, human rights defenders said they had been beaten by police and attacked by unidentifi­ed groups of assailants. Online, they face harassment by progovernm­ent trolls, according to the report, which pointed to Vietnam’s Force 47, a 10,000-strong military unit, and “Du Luan Vien”, a volunteer group made up of Communist party activists.

Facebook said: “Millions of people in Vietnam use our services every day to connect with family and friends and thousands of businesses rely on them to reach customers. We don’t always see eye to eye with government­s on issues like speech and expression, including in Vietnam, but we work hard to defend this right around the world.”

YouTube did not respond to a request for comment but told Amnesty that it “evaluates government requests for removal of content against human rights standards”.

 ??  ?? A person using Facebook at a cafe in Hanoi, Vietnam, last month. Photograph: Kham/Reuters
A person using Facebook at a cafe in Hanoi, Vietnam, last month. Photograph: Kham/Reuters

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