Anti-Myanmar hate speech flares in Thailand over spread of COVID

The latest outbreak was first detected at a seafood market near Bangkok, prompting a flare-up in online hate speech.

Earlier this week Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha said illegal immigration was behind the latest COVID outbreak in a country [File: Soe Zeya Tun/Reuters]

“Wherever you see Myanmar people, shoot them down,” read one Thai comment on YouTube after a surge of coronavirus cases among workers from Myanmar.

The outbreak, first detected at a seafood market near Bangkok, has prompted a surge in online hate speech as well as questions over Thailand’s treatment of millions of migrant workers.

“Myanmar people are being labelled for transmitting COVID-19, but the virus doesn’t discriminate,” said Sompong Srakaew of the Labour Protection Network, a Thai group helping migrant workers.

Shifting sentiment has had real consequences, he said, with workers from Myanmar, previously known as Burma, being blocked from buses, motorcycle taxis and offices.

One of the many incendiary comments on social media seen by Reuters called for migrant workers diagnosed with the disease to remain untreated as punishment for people that brought them into Thailand.

The rhetoric reflects a global pattern since the start of the pandemic of foreigners being blamed for spreading the virus.

Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha this week said illegal immigration was behind the outbreak in a country that had brought COVID-19 under control, even though Thailand’s virus task force appealed for sympathy for immigrants.

Racist and abusive language

The independent Social Media Monitoring for Peace group told Reuters it found hundreds of comments classified as hate speech on YouTube with others on Facebook and Twitter.

“The comments included racist language aimed at triggering discrimination and promoting nationalism,” said the group’s Saijai Liangpunsakul.

“We’re concerned that online discrimination could translate into further discrimination and even lead to real-world violence.”

After Reuters flagged some posts, Facebook said it had removed several for violating hate speech policies.

A migrant worker from Myanmar work at a street market in Bangkok amid the pandemic [Soe Zeya Tun/Reuters]

“We know that hate speech targeted towards vulnerable communities can be the most harmful,” a Facebook spokesperson said, saying its technology detected 95 percent of hate speech.

Facebook came under heavy criticism for the role it played in spreading hate speech that fuelled violence against Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar in 2017 and has since invested in systems that can rapidly detect and remove such content.

Twitter said it was looking into the issue. YouTube did not respond to requests for comment.

Shrimp market outbreak

Not all the social media traffic has been negative, with some Thais defending the Myanmar workers.

Government spokespeople in Thailand and Myanmar did not respond immediately to requests for comment on hate speech.

The outbreak was first detected last week at a prawn market at Samut Sakhon, barely 35 km (20 miles) from central Bangkok. Since then nearly 1,300 infections linked to the cluster have been found while thousands of people have been quarantined.

“We feel really sad that we Myanmar workers are being blamed,” said Nay Lin Thu, a 35-year-old worker from Myanmar who has now volunteered to help others.

“We are told ‘this happened because of you Myanmar’. Mostly we do not respond but some of us couldn’t contain their anger.”

Officially, Thailand has nearly 1.6 million workers from Myanmar, almost two-thirds of all migrant workers, but the real figure is higher because of illegal immigration. Most migrants are labourers or work in service industries.

“Thai people won’t take the jobs they are doing,” Taweesin Wisanuyothin, of Thailand’s COVID-19 taskforce said, as he pleaded for tolerance in a televised broadcast. “Today they are our family … Both Myanmar and Thai people are Buddhists.”

Thailand has traditionally been seen as tolerant of foreigners, but an historic enmity has been revived on social media with references to the 18th-century destruction by Burmese forces of Ayutthaya, capital of what was then known as Siam.

An estimated 1,300 infections linked to a market outside Bangkok have been found while thousands of people have been quarantined [Soe Ziya Tun/Reuters]

Myanmar has suffered a much more severe outbreak of coronavirus, with more than 2,500 dead from nearly 120,000 confirmed cases compared with 60 fatalities from at least 5,800 cases in Thailand.

How the new cases first appeared in Thailand is unclear.

Similar outbreaks among migrant workers living close together in Malaysia and Singapore showed how easily the virus could spread undetected among healthy young people who show few symptoms. In Thailand, COVID was first detected in a 67-year-old woman.

Although Thailand reported few local transmissions in recent months, Myanmar had detected cases in citizens returning from Thailand.

“Our judgement is that silent carriers have been present in Thailand,” said Sein Htay of the Yangon-based Migrant Worker Rights Network. “Living conditions for Myanmar workers are difficult for social distancing with three or four to a room.”

Despite the accusations against Myanmar workers of crossing the border illegally, Thais have done so, too.

A previous coronavirus scare flared recently when several Thai women returned home, some using illegal border crossings, after an outbreak at the nightlife spot where they worked in Myanmar.

Source: Reuters