Until recently, only few Cambodians had access to the Internet. About 80 percent of the population lives in rural areas, without even access to electricity.
Internet penetration to be between 18 and 20 percent - whereas just five years ago, the World Bank says penetration was down at 0.5 percent.
Cheaper smartphones, better 3G coverage and Facebook are all reasons for the surge. Now, the trend is videos of traffic accidents, crackdowns by security forces, and of officials caught in compromising situations.
It's not just Cambodia, Vietnam - Southeast Asia struggles with Internet freedom
Online freedoms are under attack in large parts of Asia, especially
Southeast Asia. A Freedom House study says most counties in the region
are either "not free" or only "partly free."
Deutsche Welle | 15 May 2014
While Cambodia's government considers a new law that would impose stiff
penalties for online communications the government doesn't like,
democratic Thailand continues to jail people for posts that criticize
the monarchy. Myanmar has abolished some of the world's most restrictive
censorship laws, but it is now struggling with hate speech online and
its government appears unsure about what to do.
Laos and Vietnam continue their repression of voices that could
challenge one-party rule. Vietnam has a large and flourishing online
community, but posting about certain topics can result in jail time.
Underdeveloped Laos is just starting to come online, but authorities
there appear ready to follow their Chinese and Vietnamese neighbors in
regulating online speech.
"From a legislative and content control point of view, clearly freedoms
have taken a beating in Southeast Asia," says Gayathry Venkiteswaran,
executive director of the Southeast Asian Press Alliance (SEAPA).
"But the use of online for political expression, mobilization and
alternative voices is on the rise," she adds. "In other words, people
are claiming their spaces, but states are placing more and more
restrictions."
Read on for a brief survey of the status of online free expression in
several mainland Southeast Asian countries - Vietnam, Thailand, Myanmar
and Cambodia.
Southeast Asian Internet freedom trends are "discouraging," but that's not stopping users - as in China
While Myanmar shows promise, the other nations in the region appear to
be uncomfortable with too much free speech online and are considering
tough new restrictions that don't bode well for democracy.
Vietnam
The most restrictive of the nations in mainland Southeast Asia is Vietnam.
Vietnam comes out near the bottom of the Asia regional ranking in
Freedom House's 2013 Freedom on the Net report, only beating out China. It is classified as "not free."
Earlier this month, Vietnam arrested two democracy activists in Hanoi
for posting online articles critical of the government. The two, Nguyen
Huu Vinh and Nguyen Thi Minh Thuy, are accused of violating Article 258.
The charge carries a maximum seven-year jail sentence. During the first
three months of 2014, at least six other people were convicted on the
same charge.
Vinh is the founder of the widely read Basam blog, which contains
articles gleaned from the local press as well as pieces from dissidents
critical of the government.
"Vietnam's arresting of bloggers for allegedly abusing 'democratic
freedoms' is a cynical and chilling move," says Phil Robertson, deputy
Asia director of Human Rights Watch. "Vietnam should immediately drop
these bogus charges, and then take the next step by scrapping Article
258 and other provisions of the penal code regularly used to punish free
expression."
In 2013, Vietnam overtook Iran as the world's second-worst jailer of
Internet users, after China. Reporters Without Borders says more than 30
people are behind bars. And the country has admitted to employing 1,000
pro-government "public opinion shapers" to slam critical voices.
Despite these heavy-handed tactics, Pham Doan Trang, a friend of Vinh's,
who blogs for Basam.info, says the genie is out of the bottle. Vietnam
has approximately 34 million Internet users, including 20 million
Facebook subscribers.
Third from bottom: China ranks as "not free" and a poor example for its Southeast Asian neighbors Vietnam and Myanmar
"It cannot go back to the years when the people have little access to
the outside world. In other words, democracy is an inevitable and
irreversible process," she told DW, adding that just five days after
Vinh was arrested on May 5, his website was back online and was flooded
with supportive comments.
But she says Vietnam is unlikely to build a Great Firewall, as China
has. Not because it doesn't want to, but because of the costs and
technical limitations.
Cambodia
This kingdom of 15 million sandwiched between Vietnam and Thailand leads
the mainland Southeast Asia pack in the Freedom House ranking, and is
categorized as "partly free."
Until recently, only few Cambodians had access to the Internet. About 80
percent of the population lives in rural areas, without even access to
electricity. So, online communication was long limited to an urban
minority more interested in celebrity news and dating than posting
political content.
However, the country's Internet penetration rate has grown rapidly.
Data from the Ministry of Posts and Communications suggests Internet
penetration to be between 18 and 20 percent - whereas just five years
ago, the World Bank says penetration was down at 0.5 percent.
Cheaper smartphones, better 3G coverage and Facebook are all reasons for
the surge. Now, the trend is videos of traffic accidents, crackdowns by
security forces, and of officials caught in compromising situations.
In 2012, the government said it would adopt a Cybercrime Law to regulate
Internet use and stop the spread of "false information" by "ill-willed
people."
In April,
a draft of the legislation
was leaked to the London-based free expression organization Article 19.
It contains provisions along the lines of Vietnam's Article 258.
"The law is vague and it challenges and criminalizes legitimate forms of
online expression," says David Diaz-Jogeix, director of programs for
Article 19.
Free speech advocates and rights NGOs have called on the government to
consult with legal experts and rights groups before finalizing the law.
The Cambodian government has not responded. It's thought the bill could
become law this year.
Thailand
Moving further west, Thailand falls several places below Cambodia in the
Freedom House ranking, but still ranks, barely, in the "partly free"
category.
Thais have been posting comments online since 1995. But there's been an
uptick in restrictions since the 2006 military coup against Prime
Minister Thaksin Shinawatra. Computer crime laws were enacted, and
existing lèse-majesté provisions in the legal code have been keenly
enforced.
The Computer Crimes Act aims to stop the spread of content believed to
threaten national security or create panic. But free speech advocates
criticize it for making online users liable for reproducing material
originally published by others.
According to Freedom House, the Thai state has blocked tens of thousands
of websites (21,000 URLs in 2012, up from 5,000 the year before) and
social media pages, and imprisoned several people for disseminating
information and opinion online or via mobile phone under these laws.
Thailand has been almost constantly in protest mode since 2006 and Internet restrictions have not made it easy
Myanmar
Myanmar may well be seen as a bright spot in the region - at least compared to where it used to be.
It used to have one of the most repressive and underdeveloped
telecommunication sectors. Then, in August 2012, the country lifted a
policy of media censorship that had been in place for 48 years.
There are now few limits on online content. But repressive media laws
remain in place, and could be used to punish online expression. Drafts
to replace them have been slammed for keeping content restrictions and
having harsh penalties for violations.
For this reason, Freedom House ranked Myanmar as "not free" in its 2013 report.
There are problems with access, as Internet connections remain too
expensive for large parts of the population. A 2012 estimate put
Internet penetration at just 2 percent.
In addition, ongoing problems with the country's ethnic minorities could
spell trouble in cyberspace. Hate speech and racist propaganda are
common online, and there are worries that the government could use this
as an excuse to enshrine speech restrictions in new laws.
A role for ASEAN?
Many rights and press advocates had hoped that the ten-member ASEAN, the
Association of Southeast Asian Nations, would enshrine freedom of
expression on the Internet in its ASEAN Human Rights Declaration, which
was unveiled in 2012.
They were disappointed.
The document includes a guarantee on freedom of expression and opinion
that is almost lifted word for word from the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights, but which omits the phrase "regardless of frontiers."
"It is particularly alarming that the framers of the document opted to
delete the phrase in the light of borderless communications through the
Internet and with increasing integration and exchange among the regional
media," says SEAPA's Gayathry Venkiteswaran.
"There are no binding instruments whatsoever in the region, nothing by
way of ASEAN authority," she says. "Undoubtedly, the situation [in
Southeast Asia] is one that is discouraging."
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