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Citizen Lab

On/offline: Multidimensional threats faced by environmental human rights defenders in Southeast Asia

Introduction

Those working to defend the environment confront many different online and offline threats. In 2019, 80% of environmental defenders surveyed by the Swedish Society for Nature Conservation said that the foremost risks they faced were “surveillance (physical and digital), smear campaigns, and death threats.”[2] Defenders are increasingly slandered, harassed and killed for protecting their land or opposing commercial projects such as mines, dams or plantations that are related to powerful interests.[3] The murder of environmental defenders in particular doubled between 2002 and 2017.[4] Over 100 of the 304 human rights defenders killed in 2019 worked on land, Indigenous peoples’ and environmental rights,[5] with Colombia and the Philippines being the top two deadliest countries.[6]

Attacks against environmentalists are occurring at a time when addressing pressing issues like climate change, infectious diseases and deforestation requires coordinated efforts across the world. The internet and social media have enabled activists to transcend political and geographic boundaries, creating a “global civil society”,[7] but growing reliance on technology also makes civil society vulnerable to online threats.[8] This article unpacks the physical and digital risks faced by environmental human rights defenders in three Southeast Asian countries known for their rich natural resources – Cambodia, Indonesia and the Philippines – and suggests action steps that can be taken to mitigate them.

Context

Citizen Lab researchers have documented targeted online attacks against non-governmental organisations (NGOs) working on environmental issues since 2015.[9] These attacks were not isolated cases, but part of a wider campaign against the government and NGOs in general. The difference is that while governments (and the private sector) have advanced security support in-house to respond to such attacks, NGOs typically do not.[10] Although there is a greater number of digital security training sessions or workshops for NGOs, these services are typically short-term solutions and do not serve the long-term needs of the community.

While digital attacks against states and the private sector would make headlines, similar attacks against environmental defenders do not necessarily result in widespread attention. This lack of visibility is in part because most of our knowledge of attacks comes from commercial threat reporting. Firms that conduct digital threat analysis (e.g. incidents of malware attacks) predominantly focus on prominent (and profitable) victims, such as major corporations. Meanwhile, attacks against civil society, which may not have sophisticated digital defences, tend to be overlooked or underestimated.[11] This selection bias not only impedes the development of a more holistic picture of cybersecurity – as the scope and scale of attacks against civil society remain largely unknown – but also creates debilitating consequences for civil society, which suffers from attacks in the dark.[12]

Digital threats targeting NGOs or individuals working on the environment in the global South are likely to be more severe. Reliable funding is necessary to make meaningful improvements in organisational security,[13] but activists there face obstacles in obtaining sustainable funding, especially when they have to depend on international sources.[14] Receiving foreign assistance is also increasingly problematic, as governments worldwide are cracking down on international aid to local NGOs.[15] Power relations between developed and developing countries further affect the construction of what is and is not an environmental problem, and determine what is funded or addressed.[16] Furthermore, environmental NGOs are often marginalised and work in remote areas with poor communications infrastructure and without access to legal protections, which make physical and digital safety challenging.[17]

Among funding bodies who do fund grantees working in high-risk areas (e.g. the environment), priority is usually placed on supporting an organisation’s physical security. In addition, funders may be aware of the specific physical threats to grantees, but they may be ill-equipped to evaluate digital threats facing the NGOs they support.[18] Physical and digital security, however, are increasingly interconnected.[19] Paying insufficient attention to digital security could end up eroding the gains from investing in physical security. More research and funding to better understand and mitigate both digital and physical risks faced by environmental defenders are therefore necessary.

On/offline threats in Cambodia, Indonesia and the Philippines

This section discusses findings from the literature research and semi-structured interviews we conducted with 15 environmental activists, lawyers and journalists in the three countries. It begins by providing a brief survey of internet connectivity and environmental issues in Cambodia, Indonesia and the Philippines. Subsequently, we outline the digital and physical risks described by interview participants. Our research uncovered persisting security challenges faced by environmental civil society.

98.5% of Cambodia’s 16 million people use the internet either through mobile or broadband connection, and many of them are Facebook users.[20] Since the 2018 national election and with increased use of technology, Cambodia has shifted from an electoral or competitive authoritarianism to digital authoritarianism under Prime Minister Hun Sen.[21] The election was declared a “sham” by rights groups and political observers as the government cracked down on the opposition.[22] Over the past five years, the government has passed a series of repressive new laws and amendments that further infringe on human rights,[23] including telecommunications-related restrictions.[24] There is also a growing use of the criminal process to stifle dissent, opposition and political debate through prosecutions for online speech.[25] State agencies are known to frequently target journalists,[26] NGOs,[27] and land and environmental defenders.[28] This increasing authoritarianism is coupled with the exploitation of natural resources, which are disappearing at an “alarming rate.”[29] Major infrastructure projects such as large-scale dams[30] – many of which are funded by China[31] – threaten fish supplies and cause mass displacement and high rates of deforestation.[32] Cambodia’s widespread decline in natural resources is closely linked to land grabbing,[33] the Economic Land Concession system,[34] and forcible displacement.[35]

In Indonesia, approximately 150 million of its more than 260 million people are online.[36] Indonesia’s relatively low internet penetration rate indicates a massive possibility for growth. Acknowledging this potential, President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo aimed to increase Indonesia’s infrastructure development,[37] including internet infrastructure, during his tenure.[38] In 2019, Indonesia completed the building of an undersea fibre-optic cable network, the Palapa Ring,[39] that provides broadband internet across the country. Jokowi's objectives are to improve the population’s tech skills and achieve an Indonesian “Golden Age.”[40] Jokowi’s development drive, however, has been criticised for neglecting environmental and rights protection.[41] Activists argue that this omission is why Indonesia is becoming an increasingly dangerous place for people defending the environment.[42] The rights group Protection International found that 80% of cases of rights violations in Indonesia from 2014 to 2018 involved environmentalists,[43] while ELSAM, an advocacy group, documented 27 cases in 2019 involving violence or threats of violence against environmentalists.[44] Of particular concern are Jokowi’s decisions to move the country’s capital to Borneo, which would encroach on protected forests and critically endangered orangutans,[45] and to propose the deregulation bill (Omnibus Bill), which would allow for the extraction of natural resources with very minimal safeguards.[46]

Those with internet access in the Philippines spend the greatest number of hours online in the world,[47] and 94% of adults with internet access are on social media, mostly Facebook.[48] Despite the proliferation of new media, the country was known as the fifth deadliest for journalists.[49] The Philippines is resource-rich and its 7,107 islands are home to unique and endangered species.[50] The drive to exploit natural resources has resulted in an increase of extractive projects being imposed upon communities and created a rising tide of violence against those who dare to speak out and defend their rights.[51] In 2018, President Rodrigo Duterte declared that he would personally choose palm oil or mining investors to develop Indigenous ancestral lands,[52] and in this same year, the Philippines had the highest number of murdered land and environmental defenders in the world.[53] A 2019 report by environmental NGO Global Witness found that firms involved in “mining, agribusiness, logging, and coal plants are driving attacks against environmental activists.”[54] Global brands such as Del Monte and Dole, and Filipino firms like San Miguel Corporation have been linked to local partners accused of attacks and murders of protestors.[55]

As internet penetration rates continue to climb in Cambodia, Indonesia and the Philippines,[56] the “digital divide” has remained problematic.[57] Environmental defenders who live or work (or both) in isolated rural areas and in conditions of extreme poverty still lack access to the internet or mobile networks.[58] Those living in remote villages also may not (individually) own smartphones (i.e. the smartphone is a shared resource in the family or village, making basic digital security like protecting passwords challenging).[59]

The majority of our interviewees reported low awareness of digital security practices and risks in their communities. Among those who are connected to the internet and own smartphones, attacks have been in the form of threatening text, WhatsApp and Facebook messages.[60] A webinar about rights issues in Indonesia’s restive Papua region was also disturbed by intrusions, such as spam calls to the speakers’ mobile phones and unknown users posting various messages in the chat function to disturb the meeting.[61] An organisation in the Philippines that works with Indigenous women activists had its website and email accounts hacked, resulting in the loss of two years’ worth of emails, among other data,[62] while an activist in an environmental NGO in Cambodia that we interviewed had experienced Facebook and email account login attempts, and received a Gmail notification for “government-backed attacks”.[63] Unlike other individuals and organisations we spoke to, which were lacking in terms of digital security practices, the Cambodian NGO possesses heightened digital security awareness, including using encrypted emails and chat applications.

Threats to physical security still loom large over environmental defenders, including illegal arrests and imprisonment, assassinations, violence (e.g. beatings) and sexual assault. Physical threats have been received online through email, WhatsApp, Twitter or Facebook Messenger messages, and to devices or accounts belonging to their friends, family members and colleagues.[64] In response, activists frequently replace their phone numbers and devices, which drains their time, energy and resources.[65]

Local and Indigenous peoples continue to struggle against national and global corporations in the natural resource sector (and sometimes also against their government's forestry department) to protect their land.[66] Activists regularly confront the military and police,[67] who perpetrate rights violations (e.g. performing illegal arrests)[68] alongside hired thugs, private security companies, and the security personnel of the extractive companies themselves.[69] Rampant corruption, weak rule of law and state institutions,[70] and a climate of impunity in these countries mean that rights defenders face a network of repressive actors.[71] Meanwhile, efforts to crack down on environmental NGOs and their supporters (e.g. local churches) have included barring foreign funding,[72] accusing them of corruption,[73] or labelling them as criminal organisations.[74]

Smear tactics to discredit activists have been applied online and offline. Indigenous women activists, for instance, often have their reputation attacked in person and on Facebook posts.[75] Activists have also been labelled online as leftists or communists, a phenomenon known as “red tagging”.[76] The communist stigma is especially dangerous in Indonesia due to past anti-communist pogroms[77] (e.g. the case of environmental activist Budi Pego),[78] and in the Philippines where the communist insurgency is ongoing.[79] Portraying environmentalists as communist sympathisers eases their treatment as “enemies of the state” and justifies their killings.[80]

In the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, the Philippines passed the Anti-Terrorism Act (ATA), which gives the government broad powers to classify someone as a terrorist based on a number of factors, including what they post online.[81] Some worry that the terrorist label could be applied against environmental defenders in the Philippines,[82] just as the separatist label has been applied to Indigenous peoples in Indonesia’s Papua.[83] Several Filipinx activists we spoke to were among those who had fake Facebook accounts of them created in June 2020,[84] and many wondered if this would lead to a crackdown once the ATA is enacted into law.[85] It is clear that complex and multidimensional security threats complicate the work of environmental rights defenders.

Conclusion

Cambodia, Indonesia and the Philippines are still plagued with corruption,[86] weak government[87] and high poverty rates.[88] These conditions, combined with the profit-driven exploitation of natural resources and a culture of impunity, have made the protection of land, environmental and Indigenous peoples’ rights a dangerous sector of human rights defence.[89] A 2019 report by the rights group FORUM-ASIA found that land and environmental defenders were “a key target for both state and non-state actors competing to access natural resources and implement mega development projects.”[90] As a result, they were the number one most affected group of defenders in terms of violence.

Findings from our study suggest that offline and online threats cannot be separated; they are interconnected – i.e. physical threats can be conveyed in person and online, and online threats are perpetrated offline – and constitute the multitude of threats that environmental defenders must overcome. Offline attacks may result in death or dismemberment, but the damage that is inflicted by online attacks can also be severe: causing significant stress and draining an organisation’s resources (e.g. frequent changes of devices) or emboldening all those who see it (e.g. publicly visible threats via Facebook). As Judy Pasimio, LILAK’s coordinator,[91] said: “When [threats are delivered via] text messages, it is between you and the attacker. When [threats are posted] online, the influence [of the attacker] is magnified and the threats are amplified.”[92]

Among the 14 environmental activists, lawyers and journalists we spoke to, digital attacks were launched not just against them as individuals, but also their friends, families and colleagues. These attacks strained their professional and personal lives, and created a chilling effect in their communities. Women activists in particular face threats assailing their honour, reputation and supposed gender role (e.g. "women belong in the home and not in activism"). In the Philippines, gender-based attacks have been trivialised (if not also normalised)[93] by Duterte.[94] Environmental defenders are also routinely discredited online, as communists, separatists, or having “loose morals” (e.g. accused of being drug addicts).[95]

Online and offline attacks are carried out to stop protests, activism and social movements – in which demands for accountability, the protection of human rights and the environment, and fair and transparent governance are made. Because of this, online threats against civil society must not be ignored or minimised, just as we must seriously address offline threats.

Action steps

Our research suggests that the following must be done to support environmental defenders in the region:

  • Publish more evidence-based research on digital attacks targeting civil society working on the environment, as our study indicates high vulnerability and uneven digital security practices.
  • Actively engage with private sector actors (e.g. threat intelligence firms) to encourage them to track and mitigate specific threats to civil society, regardless of ability to pay for services.
  • Appeal to funding bodies for sustainable funding towards fulfilling increasingly complex digital and physical security needs, and ensuring that support provided is contextualised to local conditions.
  • Strengthen multistakeholder advocacy efforts to raise the profile of digital and physical threats against civil society, domestically and internationally.

 

Footnotes

[1] Research undertaken in this report was supervised by Professor Ronald J. Deibert, principal investigator and director of the Citizen Lab. We would also like to thank Stephanie Tran and Justin Lau for research assistance. This article would not be possible without the 15 environmental defenders in Cambodia, Indonesia and the Philippines who shared their experiences with us. We dedicate our report to all those who are taking a stand to defend human rights and the environment.

[2] Swedish Society for Nature Conservation. (2019). Environmental Defenders Under Attack. Swedish Society for Nature Conservation. https://www.naturskyddsforeningen.se/sites/default/files/dokument-media/environmental_defenders_under_attack_eng.pdf

[3] Wåhlin, M. (2019). Defenders at Risk: Attacks on human rights and environmental defenders and the responsibility of business. Swedwatch. https://swedwatch.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/MR-fo%CC%88rsvarare_191209_uppslag.pdf

[4] Butt, N., Lambrick, F., Menton, M., & Renwick, A. (2019). The supply chain of violence. Nature Sustainability, 2(8), 742-747. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41893-019-0349-4

[5] Front Line Defenders. (2020). Frontline Defenders Global Analysis 2019. Front Line Defenders. https://www.frontlinedefenders.org/sites/default/files/global_analysis_2019_web.pdf

[6] Global Witness. (2020). Defending Tomorrow: The climate crisis and threats against land and environmental defenders. Global Witness. https://www.globalwitness.org/en/campaigns/environmental-activists/defending-tomorrow

[7] Smith, P. J., & Smythe, E. (1999). Globalization, citizenship and technology: The MAI meets the Internet. Canadian Foreign Policy Journal, 7(2), 83-105. https://doi.org/10.1080/11926422.1999.9673213

[8] Citizen Lab. (2014). Communities @ Risk: Targeted Digital Threats Against Civil Society. Citizen Lab. https://targetedthreats.net/media/1-ExecutiveSummary.pdf

[9] Kleemola, K., Crete-Nishihata, M., Senft, A., & Poetranto, I. (2015). Targeted Malware Attacks against NGO Linked to Attacks on Burmese Government Websites. Citizen Lab. https://citizenlab.ca/2015/10/targeted-attacks-ngo-burma

[10] Ibid.

[11] Maschmeyer, L., Deibert, R. J., & Lindsay, J. R. (2020). A tale of two cybers - how threat reporting by cybersecurity firms systematically underrepresents threats to civil society. Journal of Information Technology & Politics, 17, 1-20. https://doi.org/10.1080/19331681.2020.1776658

[12] Ibid.

[13] Citizen Lab. (2014). Op. cit.

[14] Ron, J., Pandya, A., & Crow, D. (2015). Universal values, foreign money: Funding local human rights organizations in the Global South. Review of International Political Economy, 23(1), 29-64. https://doi.org/10.1080/09692290.2015.1095780

[15] Ibid.

[16] Lewis, T. L. (2011). Global Civil Society and the Distribution of Environmental Goods: Funding for Environmental NGOs in Ecuador. In J. Agyeman & J. Carmin (Eds.), Environmental Inequalities Beyond Borders: Local Perspectives on Global Injustices. MIT Press.

[17] Peace Brigades International. (2015). COP21 Highlights the risks that land and environmental defenders face. PBI. https://www.peacebrigades.org/en/cop21-highlights-risks-land-and-environmental-defenders-face

[18] Ibid.

[19] Citizen Lab. (2014). Op. cit.

[20] Bangkok Post. (2019, 26 July). Internet users in Cambodia near 16m. Bangkok Post. https://www.bangkokpost.com/business/1719527/internet-users-in-cambodia-near-16m

[21] Un, K. (2019). Cambodia: Return to Authoritarianism (Elements in Politics and Society in Southeast Asia). Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108558648; Morgenbesser, L. (2019). Cambodia’s Transition to Hegemonic Authoritarianism. Journal of Democracy, 30(1), 158-171. https://doi.org/10.1353/jod.2019.0012

[22] Roth, K. (2019). World Report 2019: Cambodia. Human Rights Watch. https://www.hrw.org/world-report/2019/country-chapters/cambodia

[23] Amnesty International. (2017, 30 May). Courts of Injustice: Suppressing Activism Through the Criminal Justice System in Cambodia. Amnesty International. https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/news/2017/05/cambodia-courts-of-injustice; FIDH & LICADHO. (2019). Joint Submission to the UN Universal Periodic Review of Cambodia. https://www.fidh.org/IMG/pdf/fidh_licadho_joint_submission_cambodia_upr_july_2018.pdf  

[24] LICADHO. (2016). Cambodia’s Law on Telecommunications: A Legal Analysis. LICADHO. https://www.licadho-cambodia.org/reports/files/214LICADHOTelecomsLawLegalAnalysis_March2016ENG.pdf

[25] Freedom House. (2018). Freedom on the Net 2018: Cambodia. Freedom House. https://freedomhouse.org/country/cambodia/freedom-net/2018; LICADHO, 24 Family Community, 92 Community, et al. (2018, 8 June). Joint Statement: Civil society rejects government attack on freedom of expression. LICADHO. https://www.licadho-cambodia.org/pressrelease.php?perm=434

[26] Human Rights Watch. (2020, 17 June). Cambodia: End Crackdown on Opposition. Human Rights Watch. https://www.hrw.org/news/2020/06/17/cambodia-end-crackdown-opposition

[27] Meyn, C. (2017, 31 August). Cambodia's controversial NGO law snares its first victim. Devex. https://www.devex.com/news/cambodia-s-controversial-ngo-law-snares-its-first-victim-90947

[28] https://www.frontlinedefenders.org/en/location/cambodia

[29] Cambodian Human Rights and Development Association. (2014). Land Situation in Cambodia 2013. ADHOC. https://www.adhoccambodia.org/report-land-situation-in-cambodia-in-2013-2

[30] Xinhua. (2019, 20 April). Spotlight: China-built hydropower project in Cambodia Guarantees the way home for fish. Xinhua. http://www.xinhuanet.com/english/2019-04/20/c_137993015.htm

[31] Chen, S. A. (2019). The Development of Cambodia-China Relation and Its Transition Under the OBOR Initiative. The Chinese Economy, 51(4), 370-382. https://doi.org/10.1080/10971475.2018.1457317

[32] Davis, K. F., Yu, K., Rulli, M. C., Pichdara, L., & D'Odorico, P. (2015). Accelerated deforestation driven by large-scale land acquisitions in Cambodia. Nature Geoscience, 8, 772–775. https://doi.org/10.1038/ngeo2540

[33]Park, C. M. Y. (2018). “Our Lands are Our Lives”: Gendered Experiences of Resistance to Land Grabbing in Rural Cambodia. Feminist Economics, 25(4), 21-44. https://doi.org/10.1080/13545701.2018.1503417

[34] Hap, P., Oun, S., & Cho, H. S. (2017). The Legal Analysis of Economic Land Concessions in Cambodia. Korea Legislation Research Institute. http://www.klri.re.kr:9090/handle/2017.oak/4538

[35] Neef, A., & Singer, J. (2015). Development-induced displacement in Asia: conflicts, risks, and resilience. Development in Practice, 25(5), 601-611. https://doi.org/10.1080/09614524.2015.1052374

[36] Wong, E. (2019, 18 March). How Indonesians Embrace the Digital World. The Jakarta Post. https://www.thejakartapost.com/academia/2019/03/18/how-indonesians-embrace-the-digital-world.html

[37] Salim, W. & Negara, S. D. (2018). Infrastructure Development under the Jokowi Administration: Progress, Challenges and Policies. Journal of Southeast Asian Economies, 35(3), 145-166. https://www.jstor.org/stable/26466924?seq=1

[38] The Jakarta Post. (2019, 15 July). Jokowi pledges 'interconnectivity' as his infrastructure vision for 2019-2024. The Jakarta Post. https://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2019/07/15/jokowi-pledges-interconnectivity-as-his-infrastructure-vision-for-2019-2024.html

[39] Satu, B. (2019, 14 October). Indonesia Completes Palapa Ring Internet Superhighway. Jakarta Globe. https://jakartaglobe.id/tech/indonesia-completes-palapa-ring-internet-superhighway

[40] Tani, S. (2019, 3 July). Jokowi vows to invest in tech skills for an Indonesian 'Golden Age'. Nikkei Asian Review. https://asia.nikkei.com/Spotlight/The-Big-Story/Jokowi-vows-to-invest-in-tech-skills-for-an-Indonesian-Golden-Age

[41] Suroyo, G., & Davies, E. (2020, 13 February). Indonesia accused of putting profit ahead of the environment with new bill. Reuters. https://www.reuters.com/article/us-indonesia-economy-bill/indonesia-accused-of-putting-profit-ahead-of-the-environment-with-new-bill-idUSKBN2071DJ

[42] The Jakarta Post. (2018, 10 December). Environmentalists face greater risks amid development drive. The Jakarta Post. https://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2018/12/09/environmentalists-face-greater-risks-amid-development-drive.html

[43] Ibid.

[44] Ant. (2020, 23 April). 27 Kasus Kekerasan Dialami Aktivis Lingkungan Periode 2019. Media Indonesia. https://mediaindonesia.com/read/detail/306985-27-kasus-kekerasan-dialami-aktivis-lingkungan-periode-2019

[45] Gunadha, R., & Yasir, M. (2017, 17 December). Walhi: Pemindahan Ibu Kota Negara akan Memperluas Kehancuran Lingkungan. Suara.com. https://www.suara.com/news/2019/12/17/191611/walhi-pemindahan-ibu-kota-negara-akan-memperluas-kehancuran-lingkungan

[46] ASEAN Parliamentarians for Human Rights. (2020, 30 March). Indonesia’s Omnibus Bill Needs Improved Rights Guarantees, MPs Say. APHR. https://aseanmp.org/2020/03/30/indonesia-omnibus-bill

[47] Gonzales, G. (2019, 30 January). Filipinos spend most time online, on social media worldwide – report. Rappler. https://rappler.com/technology/philippines-online-use-2019-hootsuite-we-are-social-report

[48] Tapsell, R. (2019, 14 March). Are social media destroying democracy in Southeast Asia? The Asia Dialogue. https://theasiadialogue.com/2019/03/14/are-social-media-destroying-democracy-in-southeast-asia

[49] Committee to Protect Journalists. (2019, 29 October). Getting Away with Murder. CPJ. https://cpj.org/reports/2019/10/getting-away-with-murder-killed-justice

[50] Borkaza C., Cullinane, M., & Hernandez, C. (2020). Philippines. Encyclopaedia Britannica. https://www.britannica.com/place/Philippines/Plant-and-animal-life

[51] Global Witness. (2016). Defenders of the Earth: Global killings of land and environmental defenders in 2016. Global Witness. https://justice-project.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/defenders_of_the_earth_report-2017.pdf

[52] Arguillas, C. O. (2018, 3 February). Duterte to “choose investors” to develop Lumad lands for oil palm, mining. MindaNews. https://www.mindanews.com/top-stories/2018/02/duterte-to-choose-investors-to-develop-lumad-lands-for-oil-palm-mining

[53] Global Witness. (2019a). Enemies of the state: How governments and businesses silence land and environmental defenders. Global Witness. https://www.globalwitness.org/en/campaigns/environmental-activists/enemies-state

[54] Global Witness. (2019b). Defending the Philippines. Global Witness. https://www.globalwitness.org/en/campaigns/environmental-activists/defending-philippines

[55] Ibid.

[56] Al Jazeera News. (2019, 4 October). Online all the time: Southeast Asia's booming internet economy. Al Jazeera. https://www.aljazeera.com/ajimpact/online-time-southeast-asia-booming-internet-economy-191003101641367.html

[57] The digital divide is defined as “the inequality in use and ownership of computers and the Internet across and within nations.” See Wijers, G. D. M. (2010). Determinants of the digital divide: A study on IT development in Cambodia. Technology in Society, 32(4), 336-341. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.techsoc.2010.10.011

[58] Peace Brigades International. (2015). Op. cit.

[59] Poetranto, I., personal communication, 21 July 2020.

[60] Ibid.

[61] The Star. (2020, 7 June). Papua Zoom meet hit by spam. The Star. https://www.thestar.com.my/aseanplus/aseanplus-news/2020/06/07/papua-zoom-meet-hit-by-spam

[62] Poetranto, I., personal communication, 21 July 2020.

[63] Anstis, S., personal communication, 19 October 2019.

[64] Poetranto, I., personal communication, 21 July 21 2020.

[65] Ibid.

[66] Suyanto, S. (2007). Underlying cause of fire: Different form of land tenure conflicts in Sumatra. Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change, 12, 67-74. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11027-006-9039-4

[67] White, N. D., Footer, M., Senior, K., van Dorp, M., Kiezebrink, V., Puraka, Y. W. G., & Anzas, A. F. (2018). Blurring Public and Private Security in Indonesia: Corporate Interests and Human Rights in a Fragile Environment. Netherlands International Law Review, 65, 217-252. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40802-018-0107-8

[68] Hance, J. (2010, 7 July). Violence a part of the illegal timber trade, says kidnapped activist. Mongabay. https://news.mongabay.com/2010/07/violence-a-part-of-the-illegal-timber-trade-says-kidnapped-activist

[69] Poetranto, I., personal communication, 20 July 2020.

[70] Peou, S. (2014). The Limits and Potential of Liberal Democratisation in Southeast Asia. Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs, 33(3). https://journals.sub.uni-hamburg.de/giga/jsaa/article/view/805

[71] Anstis, S., personal communication, 19 October 2019.

[72] Ibid.

[73] Mongabay. (2012, 1 May). New attack on Greenpeace in Indonesia. Mongabay. https://news.mongabay.com/2012/05/new-attack-on-greenpeace-in-indonesia

[74] Anstis, S., personal communication, 19 October 2019.

[75] Poetranto, I., personal communication, 21 July 2020.

[76] Amnesty International. (2019, 24 June). Philippines: Stop 'red-tagging', investigate killings of activists. Amnesty International. https://www.amnesty.org/en/documents/asa35/0587/2019/en

[77] Human Rights Watch. (2017, 18 September). Indonesia’s Dangerous ‘Anti-Communist’ Paranoia: Rumors of Communist Party Revival Sparks Riot. HRW. https://www.hrw.org/news/2017/09/18/indonesias-dangerous-anti-communist-paranoia

[78] FORUM ASIA. (2018, 21 January). Indonesia – Court should release environmental human rights defender. FORUM ASIA. https://www.forum-asia.org/?p=25557

[79] Woods, C. (2017). Seditious Crimes and Rebellious Conspiracies: Anti-communism and US Empire in the Philippines. Journal of Contemporary History, 53(1), 61-88. https://doi.org/10.1177%2F0022009416669423

[80] Global Witness. (2019a). Op. cit.

[81] Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada. (n.d.). Philippine House of Representatives Passes Anti-Terrorism Act. APFC. https://www.asiapacific.ca/asia-watch/philippine-house-representatives-passes-anti-terrorism-act

[82] Poetranto, I., personal communication, 21 July 2020.

[83] Sugandi, Y. (2008). Analysis Konflik dan Rekomendasi Kebijakan Mengenai Papua. Friedrich Ebert Stiftung. https://library.fes.de/pdf-files/bueros/indonesien/06393.pdf

[84] Econar, F. C. (2020, 24 June). The Philippines Saw a Sudden Surge of Fake Facebook Accounts. Here’s Why Everyone Is on Edge. Vice. https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/ep4vyk/philippines-fake-facebook-accounts-freedom-speech-democracy

[85] Poetranto, I., personal communication, 21 July 2020.

[86] Transparency International. (2019, 29 January). Asia Pacific: Little To No Progress On Anti-Corruption. Transparency International. https://www.transparency.org/en/news/asia-pacific-makes-little-to-no-progress-on-anti-corruption

[87] Slater, D. (2020, 1 July). Southeast Asia’s Grim Resilience: Pragmatism Amid the Pandemic. Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. https://carnegieendowment.org/2020/07/01/southeast-asia-s-grim-resilience-pragmatism-amid-pandemic-pub-82227

[88] Chisholm, J. (2017, 21 November). Indonesia and the Philippines have 90% of Southeast Asia's poorest. Southeast Asia Globe. https://southeastasiaglobe.com/indonesia-philippines-poorest

[89] Front Line Defenders. (2020). Op. cit.

[90] de Leon, S. (2019). Defending in Numbers: Resistance in the Face Repression. FORUM-ASIA. https://www.forum-asia.org/uploads/wp/2019/05/DEFENDING-IN-NUMBERS-2019-FINAL-ONLINE-1.pdf

[91] LILAK (Purple Action for Indigenous Women's Rights) is “an organisation of indigenous women leaders, feminists, anthropologists, human rights advocates, environmentalists and lawyers who support the struggle for indigenous women’s human rights.” https://www.facebook.com/pg/katutubonglilak/about/?ref=page_internal 

[92] Poetranto, I., personal communication, 21 July 2020.

[93] Berlinger, J. (2018, 31 December). Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte claims he abused maid as teenager. CNN. https://www.cnn.com/2018/12/30/asia/rodrigo-duterte-comments-intl/index.html

[94] Ranada, P. (2018, 8 September). Not just a joke: The social cost of Duterte's rape remarks. Rappler. https://rappler.com/newsbreak/in-depth/duterte-rape-remarks-social-cost-not-just-jokes

[95] Poetranto, I., personal communication, 20 July 2020.

Notes:
This report was originally published as part of a larger compilation: “Global Information Society Watch 2020: Technology, the environment and a sustainable world: Responses from the global South"
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) - Some rights reserved.
ISBN 978-92-95113-40-4
APC Serial: APC-202104-CIPP-R-EN-DIGITAL-330
ISBN 978-92-95113-41-1
APC Serial: APC-202104-CIPP-R-EN-P-331

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