The Japan Times - China's Taiwan drills accompanied by wave of misinformation

EUR -
AED 4.236995
AFN 72.682942
ALL 95.499599
AMD 434.251954
ANG 2.065235
AOA 1057.951222
ARS 1605.382781
AUD 1.64816
AWG 2.07956
AZN 1.962086
BAM 1.946619
BBD 2.31966
BDT 141.323481
BGN 1.972045
BHD 0.435048
BIF 3409.12169
BMD 1.153709
BND 1.472953
BOB 7.958466
BRL 6.13012
BSD 1.151768
BTN 107.673185
BWP 15.704931
BYN 3.49432
BYR 22612.692624
BZD 2.316375
CAD 1.582855
CDF 2624.687914
CHF 0.910144
CLF 0.027116
CLP 1070.699078
CNY 7.944902
CNH 7.968707
COP 4233.434017
CRC 537.962827
CUC 1.153709
CUP 30.573283
CVE 109.747403
CZK 24.475875
DJF 205.092729
DKK 7.470501
DOP 68.367561
DZD 152.575662
EGP 59.996458
ERN 17.305632
ETB 181.514032
FJD 2.554831
FKP 0.864812
GBP 0.866441
GEL 3.132315
GGP 0.864812
GHS 12.554788
GIP 0.864812
GMD 84.797727
GNF 10095.387511
GTQ 8.822391
GYD 240.963553
HKD 9.037878
HNL 30.485224
HRK 7.512147
HTG 151.097385
HUF 392.907233
IDR 19562.517279
ILS 3.587025
IMP 0.864812
INR 108.4608
IQD 1508.784179
IRR 1517848.149879
ISK 143.371629
JEP 0.864812
JMD 180.946608
JOD 0.81798
JPY 183.840071
KES 149.206304
KGS 100.889409
KHR 4602.294375
KMF 492.634265
KPW 1038.372085
KRW 1736.689162
KWD 0.353693
KYD 0.959773
KZT 553.718519
LAK 24732.355738
LBP 103147.330197
LKR 359.285515
LRD 210.765973
LSL 19.429067
LTL 3.406602
LVL 0.697867
LYD 7.373226
MAD 10.762342
MDL 20.057404
MGA 4802.350857
MKD 61.350654
MMK 2421.422446
MNT 4116.640054
MOP 9.296655
MRU 46.103564
MUR 53.658616
MVR 17.835848
MWK 1997.180773
MXN 20.704471
MYR 4.544428
MZN 73.7177
NAD 19.429067
NGN 1564.71816
NIO 42.380124
NOK 11.057422
NPR 172.277494
NZD 1.982693
OMR 0.4436
PAB 1.151768
PEN 3.98192
PGK 4.971553
PHP 69.395518
PKR 321.563224
PLN 4.276224
PYG 7522.521818
QAR 4.211637
RON 5.078046
RSD 116.898675
RUB 95.998092
RWF 1675.796505
SAR 4.33178
SBD 9.289271
SCR 15.803168
SDG 693.379249
SEK 10.79329
SGD 1.477088
SHP 0.86558
SLE 28.35236
SLL 24192.709325
SOS 658.195776
SRD 43.249663
STD 23879.442983
STN 24.384994
SVC 10.077472
SYP 127.728575
SZL 19.435338
THB 37.966256
TJS 11.062327
TMT 4.049518
TND 3.401557
TOP 2.777853
TRY 51.123432
TTD 7.814146
TWD 36.961029
TZS 2994.477262
UAH 50.45524
UGX 4353.467906
USD 1.153709
UYU 46.411113
UZS 14041.775313
VES 524.580585
VND 30356.386139
VUV 137.118236
WST 3.1471
XAF 652.877857
XAG 0.016971
XAU 0.000256
XCD 3.117956
XCG 2.07571
XDR 0.811971
XOF 652.877857
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.276092
ZAR 19.716207
ZMK 10384.764004
ZMW 22.487941
ZWL 371.493765
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • CMSD

    -0.2420

    22.658

    -1.07%

  • BCC

    -1.5600

    68.3

    -2.28%

  • BCE

    0.0600

    25.79

    +0.23%

  • CMSC

    -0.2000

    22.65

    -0.88%

  • RYCEF

    -1.2600

    15.34

    -8.21%

  • GSK

    -0.5300

    51.84

    -1.02%

  • NGG

    -3.5400

    81.99

    -4.32%

  • RELX

    -0.4600

    33.36

    -1.38%

  • RIO

    -2.5000

    83.15

    -3.01%

  • JRI

    -0.3900

    11.77

    -3.31%

  • BTI

    -1.3500

    57.37

    -2.35%

  • AZN

    -5.3300

    183.6

    -2.9%

  • VOD

    -0.0900

    14.33

    -0.63%

  • BP

    -1.0800

    44.78

    -2.41%

China's Taiwan drills accompanied by wave of misinformation
China's Taiwan drills accompanied by wave of misinformation / Photo: Noel Celis - AFP

China's Taiwan drills accompanied by wave of misinformation

Taiwan saw a spike in online misinformation as China hosted huge military drills this month, much of it aimed at undermining the democratic island's morale and pushing Beijing's narrative.

Text size:

China raged against a visit to Taipei by United States House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, sending warships, missiles and jets into the waters and skies around its self-ruled neighbour.

At the same time pro-China posts flooded social media with false and misleading claims about Pelosi and her Taiwanese hosts.

Many were posts sharing old military footage alongside claims they showed real military drills, mainly by China.

And as tensions in the Taiwan Strait rose to their highest level in years, fact-checkers played a round the clock game of whack-a-mole.

Charles Yeh, chief editor for Taiwanese fact-check site MyGoPen, said most of the misinformation his team had observed was anti-American and promoted the idea that the island should "surrender" to China.

"In addition to military exercises in the physical world, China has also launched offensives in the online world -- cyberattacks and misinformation," he said.

- Misogyny -

Pelosi, a veteran critic of Beijing's human rights record, was the highest-ranking elected American official to visit Taiwan in decades and her journey generated huge interest in China.

A hashtag for her name attracted some 800 million views on China's Twitter-like platform Weibo on the day she landed.

As millions watched a Weibo livestream of a flight-tracking site showing Pelosi's flight landing in Taiwan, unsubstantiated claims emerged that her plane was forced to turn back to the US after she got heatstroke.

Some Chinese users levelled vicious insults at her, many of them misogynistic such as branding her an "unhinged hag" and questioning why she was allowed to avoid Taiwan's strict Covid quarantine measures.

Asked about the reaction during her trip, Pelosi addressed the gendered criticism directly.

"I think they made a big fuss because I'm Speaker I guess," she said.

"I don't know if that was a reason or an excuse, because they didn't say anything when the men came," she added, referencing previous visits by male US politicians.

That comment sparked a wry chuckle from the woman standing next to her, Taiwan's President Tsai Ing-wen.

- An open internet -

Taiwan is one of Asia's most progressive democracies and enjoys a much freer media environment than the authoritarian Chinese mainland, where a "Great Firewall" and pervasive state censorship keeps watch.

But this means misinformation often spreads easily, both on major social media sites and more local messaging boards such as PTT.

Taiwanese defence officials said they had identified some 270 "false" online claims in recent weeks.

In one case, police arrested a woman accused of sharing a false message on the messaging app LINE saying that Beijing had decided to evacuate Chinese citizens in Taiwan.

In a media briefing, a police spokesman said the woman was trying to "destabilise Taiwan" by sharing the message.

In other widely viewed posts, a warning message purportedly issued by China's state-run Xinhua news agency erroneously claimed China would "resume sovereignty" over Taiwan on August 15.

The message –- viewed more than 356,000 times on the Chinese-owned app TikTok –- said Taiwan's army would be disbanded and that an opposition party politician would be installed as governor.

The same claim also circulated repeatedly on Facebook.

AFP's Fact Check team found no evidence that the state-run news agency had run such a report.

Another video falsely claiming the Kinmen Islands –- a collection of Taiwanese-controlled islands off the coast of mainland China –- had agreed to be transferred to Chinese rule racked up more than 80,000 views on YouTube within two days.

- 'Shaping public opinion' -

Summer Chen, editor-in-chief for Taiwan's FactCheck Center, said Chinese-language misinformation spreads rapidly and widely, making it impossible for fact-checkers alone to entirely stem the flow.

"(Fact-checkers) mostly lay out the misleading claims and official clarification side by side, but by this point, the claims will have already achieved their purpose of shaping the public's opinion," she said.

Since 2018, a handful of Chinese-language fact-checking organisations have been founded in Taiwan, most of them non-profit organisations, citing a growing need to tackle misinformation that they say seeks to destabilise the island's democracy.

MyGoPen and Taiwan's FactCheck Center are among the Taiwanese organisations working with Meta, which owns Facebook, to reduce the spread of misinformation.

AFP is also part of Meta's third-party fact-checking programme.

Chen said it was important for Taiwanese people to think critically about what they read online and not rely entirely on fact-checkers.

"It is easy (for us) to debunk this kind of misinformation, but it is more important for the public to rationally reject this kind of information and avoid falling into traps," she said.

Y.Kimura--JT