With over half of Myanmar’s population using Facebook, the platform is synonymous with the internet for many residents in the country, and many users consider the posts and pages on their news feed to be reliable news sources. But Facebook has time and again failed to take appropriate measures to fully eradicate hateful content and disinformation found in these posts, actively harming users and non-users in the country alike.
Approximately 88% of Myanmar’s population practices Buddhism, with only 4% following Islam. The Rakhine state is home to the Rohingya minority, which is the country’s largest population of Muslims. Many other citizens falsely believe Rohingya Muslims are “illegal immigrants” from Bangladesh, and religious tensions -- fueled by anti-Muslim sentiment on Facebook -- have remained high in the recent past. The nation’s military has exacerbated these tensions in order to create violence and justify its control of the country -- also using Facebook as a vehicle for fanning these flames.
On February 1, Myanmar’s military seized full control of the country’s government and detained civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi in a move which has been widely recognized as a “coup.” (Suu Kyi herself had been widely criticized for amplifying hate speech against the Rohingyas while also allowing mass ethnic cleansing to occur.) According to a Reuters investigation, in the weeks leading up to the takeover, dozens of Facebook accounts and pages alleged election fraud and called for military intervention. These posts were widely circulated before Facebook intervened.
In 2017, the company faced significant criticism after it neglected to take action against incitement and hate speech during a spike in violence against the Rohingya. Facebook's failure to properly address these issues in a timely manner -- despite forewarning -- was just the culmination of a larger pattern of negligence by the platform during the company’s decadelong stint in the country.
Facebook’s lack of accountability in the region has resulted in extreme violence and countless deaths. Yet, it continues to quell its critics with empty promises to “do better” in the future, rather than invest resources into bettering its work through hiring additional moderators and properly identifying -- and addressing -- hate speech on the platform.
Below, Media Matters has compiled a timeline of Facebook’s presence in Myanmar, cataloguing its multitude of failures in protecting its users and contributing to destabilizing the country.