Myanmar Rohingya: Why Facebook banned an army chief
A number of high-profile army figures in Myanmar, including the army chief, no longer have Facebook accounts.
Facebook
cancelled their accounts after a UN report called for several leaders to be
investigated and prosecuted for genocide over their role in violence against the
Rohingya minority and others.
It's the
first time Facebook has banned any country's military or political leader.
In all,
Facebook has removed 18 accounts linked to Myanmar and 52 Facebook pages. One
account on Instagram, which Facebook owns, was also closed.
Between them
they were followed by almost 12 million people.
Facebook is
one of the biggest social media platforms in Myanmar (also called Burma), with
more than 18 million users.
The UN
report said that for most users in Myanmar "Facebook is the internet"
but that it had become a "useful instrument for those seeking to spread
hate".
What was in
the UN report?
Its wording
was the strongest UN condemnation so far of the military's operations against
the Rohingya.
The military
launched a crackdown in Rakhine state last year after Rohingya militants
carried out deadly attacks on police posts.
Thousands of
people have died and more than 700,000 Rohingya have fled to neighbouring
Bangladesh. There are also widespread allegations of human rights abuses,
including arbitrary killing, rape and burning of land.
What next for Myanmar after damning report?
The report named six senior military
figures, including Myanmar's top commander Min Aung Hlaing, who it said should
be investigated for genocide, and called for the case to be referred to the
International Criminal Court (ICC).
The report
had begun its investigations months before the latest crisis, which it said had
been "a catastrophe looming for decades".
Who are the
Rohingya and why are they so hated?
The Rohingya
are one of many ethnic minorities inside Myanmar and make up the largest
percentage of Muslims - but they are not officially classed as Burmese
citizens.
The
government sees them as illegal immigrants from neighbouring Bangladesh, which also
denies them citizenship.
Even the
term "Rohingya" is controversial and many in Myanmar avoid using it,
instead calling them "Bengali", which reinforces the notion that they
are immigrants from Bangladesh.
Who are the Rohingya group behind attacks?
They have mostly
lived in Myanmar's under-developed Rakhine state, competing for resources with
other struggling ethnic groups who feel they are the true Burmese.
The UN
report said that over the years, government and military actions against the
Rohingya had resulted in "severe, systemic and institutionalised oppression
from birth to death".
The state
newspaper has used words like "fleas" to describe them.
Buddhist
nationalist groups have also pushed the idea that Rohingya Muslims are a
threat, seeking to turn the country to Islam.
What do
people say online about the Rohingya?
A Reuters
report last year found more than 1,000 posts, comments and images on Facebook
attacking the Rohingya and Muslims.
Comments
describe the Rohingya as dogs, maggots and rapists. Others suggest that they be
fed to pigs.
Some
outright condemned Islam, with one Facebook page in Burmese calling for
"genocide of all Muslims".
What about
the army chief?
Army chief
Min Aung Hlaing had two Facebook accounts.
According to
AFP news agency, one account had 1.3m followers and the other 2.8m followers -
a substantial following. His position also means he wields a huge amount of
influence.
In a
Facebook post, he too referred to Rohingya as "Bengali", saying that
Rohingya was a "fabricated" word.
Facebook
said his page - along with other banned pages - had "inflamed ethnic and
religious tensions."
According to
news site the Myanmar Times, presidential spokesperson U Zaw Htay said that the
decision to ban the accounts was made without consulting the government.
He added
that they were "in talks with Facebook to get the accounts back".
What has
Facebook done?
Nothing
until now.
This issue
is not a new one. In 2014, experts raised the alarm about Facebook's role in spreading
hate speech in Myanmar.
In March, a
UN official said Facebook had "turned into a beast" in the country.
The report
said Facebook had been "slow and ineffective", in tackling hate
speech. The "extent to which Facebook posts and messages have led to
real-world discrimination and violence must be independently and thoroughly
examined," it said.
Facebook
agreed on Tuesday that it had been "too slow to act", but that it was
"making progress - with better technology to identify hate speech,
improved reporting tools and more people to review content".
Facebook
also acknowledged that many in Myanmar relied on the platform for information,
"more so than in almost any other country".
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