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A threat to democracy? 'Buzzers' suspected to amplify dispute over Papua independence

Facebook has identified and removed Facebook accounts, pages and Instagram accounts suspected of coordinated inauthentic behavior to peddle controversy about Papua.

Ardila Syakriah (The Jakarta Post)
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Jakarta
Wed, October 9, 2019

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A threat to democracy? 'Buzzers' suspected to amplify dispute over Papua independence Facebook released a statement last Thursday saying that it had identified and removed 69 Facebook accounts, 42 pages and 34 Instagram accounts suspected of coordinated inauthentic behavior in Indonesia, primarily sharing content about West Papua, with some in support of and others in opposition to the independence movement. (Shutterstock.com/oneinchpunch )

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ndonesians are known for their addiction to Facebook, but for one 22-year-old university student, Faizul (not his real name), posting 350 comments a day on the platform was a part of his freelance job that he later found unsettling.

Faizul did not write the comments himself, nor did he choose where to post them. That was the job of another team at a Jakarta-based public relations and media company that he signed up for recently. In short, all the comments contained messages that were anti-West Papuan independence and pro-Indonesian government.

"My team consisted of six people and one team leader. There are four other similar teams. We were tasked with the same job and we used fake accounts to post the comments," he told The Jakarta Post on Monday, adding that he was promised a salary of Rp 1.5 million.

All Faizul had to do was to wait for his team leader to provide him with the comments, written in Indonesian and English, and the links to posts on which he had to post the comments, at noon. Then, he would have until 8 p.m. to post all the comments and take screenshots of them to be sent to his leader as proof that he had done his job for the day.

Among the topics of his posted comments was human rights lawyer Veronica Koman, who has been actively sharing information on the recent protests and riots in Papua and West Papua on Twitter, and the recent clashes in Wamena, Jayawijaya regency of Papua.

Read also: SPECIAL REPORT: Wamena investigation: What the government is not telling us

The posts not only contained messages touting what the government had done for the country's two easternmost provinces, but sometimes would also intend to "bring down" other posters, Faizul said.

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