The Rise of Internet Shutdown in Southeast Asia region

Damar Juniarto
3 min readJul 31, 2020
The numbers of Internet Shutdowns around the world in 2019 (Source: Keep It On/AccessNow Report)

Online censorship, cyber surveillance, and internet shutdowns are the key ingredients in a rising wave of digital authoritarianism/dictatorship.

An internet shutdown, explained by AccessNow, is an intentional disruption of internet or electronic communications, rendering them inaccessible or effectively unusable, for a specific population or within a location, often to exert control over the flow of information.” While OONI/Open Network of Network Intervention puts online censorship like blocking apps and websites also forms of internet shutdown.

Keep It On coalition 2019 report recorded internet shutdown in two countries in Southeast Asia region: Myanmar especially in the Chin and Rakhine states and also Indonesia especially in Papua and West Papua provinces.

In Myanmar, internet shutdown isnhappened more than two years, until now. The Myanmar government practices internet shutdown based on national security reason to control the population of Rohingya people in Rakhine and Chin state.

On May 26, 2020, the Keep It On coalition issued an open letter to the Deputy Director-General of the WHO, Dr. Zsuzsanna Jakab, calling on her to urge the governments of Bangladesh, India, Myanmar, and Pakistan to end the blatant and arbitrary internet shutdowns currently ongoing — even amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

While in Indonesia, internet shutdown was based on national security rather than what-so-called the worrying spreading of hoaxes. If the Government said the reason of internet shutdown for handling hoaxes, actually it is an instant and easy and lazy way to solve problem of hoaxes, which create greater problems and undermine digital rights.

On 18 August 2019, there was peaceful demonstrations due to protests over racism experienced by Papuan students in Surabaya and Malang in 16 August 2019. To control the situation, the Government decides to practice internet shutdown as details:

● Bandwidth throttling in several areas of West Papua Province and Papua Province on August 19, 2019 from 13.00 Eastern Indonesian Time to 20.30 Eastern Indonesian Time
● Internet shutdown completely in Papua Province (29 cities / districts) and West Papua Province (13 cities / districts) dated August 21 — September 4, 2019 at 23:00 Eastern Indonesian Time
● Internet shutdown continues in 4 cities / districts in Papua Province (ie Jayapura City, Jayapura Regency, Mimika Regency, and Jayawijaya Regency) and 2 cities / districts in West Papua Province (ie Manokwari City and Sorong City) from September 4–9, 2019

Papua and West Papua have long been conflict areas in eastern part of Indonesia. The government usually used security approaches and technological oppression to curb freedom of expression and freedom to assembly.

Actually internet shutdown in Papua and West Papua was not the first time in Indonesia. Previous cases had occurred during the riots after the election in May, 2019. On 22–25 May 2019, the government “ordered” internet service providers to slow down image and video in WhatsApp and social media.

I saw similarity between these two internet shutdown in Myanmar and Indonesia: the Governments used the internet shutdown to oppress the people, so they can not exercise their rights and also can not exercise the freedom of assembly (in the situation like COVID-19 right now) as we use digital space as a way to do consolidation among civil society groups and spreading hope.

Let’s be aware because internet shutdowns were growing as a new trend in the globe and the possibilities that internet shutdown will be used in this region. Meanwhile we still having problems of internet shutdown within current countries like at Rakhine and Chin states in Myanmar, as well as at Papua and West Papua in Indonesia, we have to be careful since the dawn of digital authoritarianism/dictatorship in the region.

In the end of my respond, “will democracy survive “national security” in the digital space of Southeast Asia?” YES, if we are fighting back these digital authoritarian practices. [dam]

Presented in session “Will democracy survive “national security” in the digital space of Southeast Asia?” held by Manushsya Foundation and PEN International during RightsCon 2020.

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Damar Juniarto

Love to write on new media, digital democracy, internet policy, freedom of expression, cyber security. https://linktr.ee/damarjuniarto