Hun Sen’s Facebook ‘Likes’ Real, Government Declares
[Of course, they are! - Pee Wee]
Cambodia Daily | 24 March 2016
Claims that Prime Minister Hun Sen’s recent spike in Facebook
popularity is the result of purchasing “likes” from abroad are [
“completely twisted [like, TOTALLY, Dude!],” the government’s National Counter-Terrorism
Committee concluded in a five-page report released on Wednesday.
Since late January, the number of accounts that have liked the prime
minister’s Facebook page has soared, with hundreds of thousands of those
users based outside Cambodia, according to statistics collected from
the web analytics site Socialbakers.
Since passing the 2-million-like mark in mid-January, Mr. Hun Sen’s
page has rapidly amassed likes from around the world, with his current
tally at more than 3.37 million—well above opposition leader Sam
Rainsy’s total, which currently stands at about 2.3 million.
The most significant source of new likes is India, where the number
of users following Mr. Hun Sen has increased from about 6,000 in early
February to more than 387,000 as of Wednesday, according to
Socialbakers. The premier has also seen a sharp increase in likes from
Thailand and the Philippines.
Mr. Rainsy has seized on the statistics in an attempt to discredit
the prime minister’s apparent online popularity. He has accused Mr. Hun
Sen of buying likes from “click farms,” posting photographs and graphics
to his own Facebook page explaining how such operations work.
“A significant number of those ‘likes’ were obtained by hiring poor
and jobless people to create fake Facebook accounts so as to provide
artificial ‘likes’ to Hun Sen,” Mr. Rainsy wrote in one post. “Most of
the people hired to do so are living in India and the Philippines.”
“The number of ‘likes’ were clarified to be real supporters including
Cambodian people and sup- porters from abroad; no money was spent to
buy ‘likes,’” states the report, compiled by the committee’s technical
information department and based on data from Socialbakers and Fanpage
Karma, a Facebook analytics site.
“If Samdech Techo Hun Sen buys likes to boost the number of
supporters, or the number of page likes of Samdech Techo are ghost
numbers without account owners as alleged, Samdech Hun Sen’s page would
not have a lot of activity such as likes, comments and shares,” the
report says.
Dated Tuesday, the report concludes by blasting Mr. Rainsy for
sharing a Phnom Penh Post article with the headline “Only 20 per cent of
PM’s recent Facebook ‘likes’ from Cambodia”—a statistic taken from the
four weeks between early February and early March.
“The article is completely twisted because, based on the data above,
the result found that in Cambodia there are more than 56.3 percent [of
likes], equal to nearly 1.9 million people. It is the opposite of what
Sam Rainsy claimed,” it says, disregarding the time period analyzed in
the article.
“So Sam Rainsy’s claims are not true. It is only a political message to cheat the people who know nothing.”
Mr. Rainsy called the entire report into question and challenged Mr.
Hun Sen to personally file a defamation lawsuit against him.
“Firstly, I don’t see why an ‘Anti-Terrorism Committee’ would have
anything to do with this relatively trivial issue of Facebook ‘likes,’”
he said in an email.
“Secondly, if they really come to the conclusion that Hun Sen’s
Facebook ‘likes’ are all genuine (not fake and not bought), then they
are really unprofessional since the evidence is just irrefutable that a
large portion of those ‘likes’ are actually fake or were actually
purchased from click-farms abroad,” he added.
“Thirdly, I challenge Hun Sen to file a defamation lawsuit against me
because I publicly maintain that he is a Facebook cheater.”
Members of the counterterrorism committee could not be reached on Wednesday.
A senior member of Mr. Hun Sen’s administration, however, proceeded
with a lawsuit related to a separate claim made by Mr. Rainsy that he
had helped engineer the fake Facebook likes.
Som Soeun, a minister attached to the prime minister, met for more
than an hour on Wednesday with Meas Chanpiseth, a deputy prosecutor at
the Phnom Penh Municipal Court, for questioning over a lawsuit he filed
against Mr. Rainsy earlier this month.
After the questioning, Mr. Soeun explained that he was compelled to
defend himself against accusations that he had encouraged party mem-
bers to generate fake likes as part of the prime minister’s social media
machine.
“Mr. Rainsy faked the information. He was deceitful, saying that I am
a person who advised the supporters and officials—including civil
servants, police and military—to create fake Facebook accounts to fake
support for Samdech Prime Minister,” he said.
“That affects the honor of the country’s leader, Samdech Prime
Minister, and my honor, because he used my message to attack Samdech,”
he said, referring to a message he sent to party members en- couraging
them to drum up support for the premier’s Facebook page.
“I request that the court punish Sam Rainsy according to the law, and I demand 20 million riel [about $5,000] in compensation.”
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