Cambodia leaders rev up Facebook rivalry as popularity soars
AP / Yahoo News | 3 March 2016
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) — Cambodia's long-ruling Prime
Minister Hun Sen and exiled opposition leader Sam Rainsy have gotten an
early start on campaigning for elections in 2018, vying for "likes" in
Facebook as the political role of social media grows among the country's
youthful electorate.
Both
Hun Sen and Sam Rainsy tend to favor a casual approach, like Sam Rainsy
riding a bicycle in the snow, or standing at the beach in a swimsuit.
Hun Sen, swathed in a plush, white terrycloth bathrobe, clutching two
mobile phones in the dark; sitting on the ground eating noodles,
watering flowers, or hugging his grandchildren.
"Technology can
make you ubiquitous," said one of Sam Rainsy's recent posts. Given his
nearly daily updates from villages, ceremonies and golf courses, Hun Sen
appears to agree.
With a general election due in 2018 and local
polls next year, Hun Sen increasingly is using Facebook as a way to
answer public complaints, monitor dissent and polish his public image.
On Feb. 8, he ordered government officials to set up a working group to
track citizens' complaints and appeals.
"We are in a pre-election
campaign already," said Jonathan Bogais, an expert on Southeast Asia at
the University of Sydney. "Hun Sen knows it will be very difficult so he
is taking action early."
Cambodia got a late start: Software
enabling use of the local language Khmer script was only developed about
a decade ago. But since [2013 when Unicode overtook Limon pictorial system] then the country has leapfrogged straight into
digital politics.
Now, almost all adults in Cambodia own mobile phones and nearly
a third say they have Facebook accounts, according to an Asia
Foundation study compiled in 2015.
More Cambodians rely on
Facebook for news than on the radio, though television still is their
leading source of information, the Asia Foundation study showed.
Cambodia
has not invested in the kinds of sophisticated surveillance technology
used to police the Internet in communist-ruled China, and is unlikely to
do so, says Tharum Bun, a blogger and communications specialist based
in Phnom Penh.
"I believe the government won't go down that road
because it's going to be a significant setback to do that," he said. "A
win-win strategic approach is to utilize the Internet, Facebook and
digital platforms for social listening as well as for a modern-time
media machine."
It's impossible to know how accurate a measure of
popularity Facebook "likes" can provide. Most popular in Cambodia, as of
Tuesday, was Voice of America in Khmer, with nearly 3 million "likes."
Hun Sen had 2.84 million and Sam Rainsy had 2.2 million, substantial
followings for a country of about 15 million people.
Hun Sen's grandfatherly images on Facebook belie his reputation
as a sometimes ruthless ruler. Social media can also be a potent weapon
for damaging reputations.
Over three decades in power, Hun Sen has long exerted strong control over traditional media, and expressing public dissent in Cambodia remains risky. The government has tightened controls on telecommunications and threatens prosecution of online critics, especially those commenting on Hun Sen and his family.
But
while the government still engages in violent repression at times, Hun
Sen is a master of political strategy and mindful of the changing
mindsets of Cambodians, apparently viewing Facebook as a way to exert
control in a subtler, nonviolent way.
"Now he faces a very
different situation with social media. It cannot be controlled through
hard repression," Bogais said. "He has to ensure he takes control and
reinforces a 'benevolent autocrat' image."
Hun Sen denied that a
Facebook page set up after his party lost more than 20 parliamentary
seats to Sam Rainsy's Cambodia National Rescue Party in a 2013 election
was his, until September, when after his page logged more than 1.3
million "likes" he started posting frequent updates.
"All
Cambodian compatriots, for the sake of our country's progress,
especially to promote people's livelihoods, please join with Hun Sen to
prevent and eradicate corruption by sending messages or documents to
this 'inbox'," he said in a post Monday.
Sam Rainsy, cut off from
traditional media and facing possible arrest if he returns home, has
little choice but to rely on his Facebook page and other alternatives.
Both
men's posts are aimed at younger Cambodians who form nearly 40 percent
of the electorate, grew up as their country opened to the outside world
and aspire for more. Older Cambodians still haunted by the bloody rule
of the Khmer Rouge in the 1970s, when about a quarter of the population
died from torture, overwork, starvation, executions and illness, may be
more satisfied with peace and growing prosperity, said Bogais.
Social media is opening Cambodia in positive ways, Tharum Bun said.
"To
be a popular digital democracy ruler on Facebook, Cambodian leaders
have to be more accountable and transparent to their citizens," he said.
"Who reads press releases anymore when a picture worth a thousand words
can potentially go viral?"
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