https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GumuU9LVsl0&feature=youtu.be
On June 9, the Oxus Society for Central Asian Affairs hosted a webinar that brought together experts from across the region to share their insights on the effects of disinformation amid the Covid-19 pandemic in Kazakhstan. The speakers highlighted that the Kazakh government’s attempt to monopolize control over information and shape the media space increased the negative impacts of the proliferation of false information.
Tinatin Japaridze, a Director of Policy and Strategy at The Critical Mass (TCM), presented a recent study conducted in three countries – Georgia, Kazakhstan, and Ukraine. The research, sponsored by the U.S. Department of State Global Engagement Center, aimed to assess the impact of disinformation on people’s various spheres of life. Based on local experts’ inputs, the study identified several key trends in Kazakhstan:
- Both Russian state-affiliated and local actors have exploited the domestic situation and pandemic outbreak to push disinformation and increase their influence in the region.
- The pandemic has weakened confidence in official institutions, decreasing the credibility of their public health messaging efforts.
- Corruption is a primary cause of low trust in medical personnel.
- Experts are aware of very few local countermeasures against Russian-origin disinformation.