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Thinzar Shunlei Yi is one of the few pro-democracy activists in Myanmar who is willing to do on-the-record interviews. But while her identity may be known, her location and data are protected. Even before the coup on February 1, she and many activists have had to adapt in order to protect themselves and the information they are trying to get out of Myanmar from military censors. Young activists in Myanmar came of age during almost ten years of semi-democratic rule when they had full access to the Internet. However, the constant threat of military surveillance of internet data and social media content has led many people to use tools like Virtual Private Network (VPN) apps, encrypted messaging services and anonymous browsers in order to communicate and post content without fear of detection or arrest. According to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners Burma (AAPPB), a Thailand-based human rights organization, more than 3,600 people have been arrested, charged or sentenced since Myanmar’s military, the Tatmadaw, took power in February. Many face up to 20 years in prison for inciting hatred towards the military and three to seven years for stirring up fear or unrest in public. Hundreds more have been killed. “People are paying the price almost every day on the street,” said Thinzar Shunlei Yi. “Myanmar people feel that we have nothing more to lose.”
Myanmar’s growing online activist army In the days following the coup, scores of people in Myanmar took to social media to share their shock and anger. Activists, citizen journalists and concerned citizens stepped away from Facebook to platforms like Twitter and TikTok. Many people were wary of the military monitoring and spreading false information on Facebook.
It is our duty to defend democracy. Phone calls and text messages moved to encrypted messaging services like Signal or Telegram. When the Internet was completely blocked, people used the telephone. A broader civil disobedience movement soon went online, with platforms used to organize boycotts and strikes. The number of Twitter users in Myanmar grew from an estimated 190,000 in December 2020 to 1.2 million in March 2021, according to numbers on StatCounter and
24 Weltzeit 2 | 2021
The battle for Myanmar plays out on Twitter, TikTok and Telegram Young activists are campaigning for democracy in the face of a military clampdown on the Internet. They are using technology to ensure access to free and reliable information. DW and Psiphon are working in tandem to get objective news content into the country. by Ole Tangen Jr, DW editor
DataReportal. Others moved to TikTok and started posting live and recorded videos of clashes between protesters and police, and tributes to those killed. The hashtag #savemyanmar has been used 1.4 billion times on the platform.
Playing cat and mouse with censors The military has reacted to the rise in pro-democracy content by continuing to disseminate fake news on Facebook, while arresting prominent social media influencers who dare to speak out. The military regime has also progressively shut down internet access across Myanmar while trying to block access to social media sites. Only broadband-based internet connections at homes and offices remain online as the military tries to keep the economy going. Without mobile internet, users take risks to find open Wifi hot spots. And almost all internet access remains blocked at night. Michael Hull, the president of the Psiphon Inc, the company that makes the
censorship circumvention app Psiphon, has been monitoring the situation in Myanmar. According to company data shared with DW, the use of the Psiphon app increased from around 6,000 daily users just before the coup to almost 2 million users within 48 hours after the coup. During the next few weeks, Psiphon was the number one downloaded app in Myanmar as more and more people needed the technology to access blocked sites. “This has been a universal response to shutdowns regardless of where people are around the world,” Hull said. “Populations are capable of not only reacting but communicating to each other the information needed to get people back online,” he added. Psiphon, which is available in Burmese, works by encrypting the data coming from the device and allows users to access blocked content — like social media sites — through a variety of technologies and by routing the data through a network of servers around the world. Even with all the barriers that currently limit how Internet can be accessed in Myanmar, Hull said that 600,000 people a day are still using