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Besides being one of the countries most severely affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, Indonesia also experienced a severe âEURoeinfodemicâEUR: an overabundance of contradictory informationâEUR"including misinformation and disinformationâEUR"on COVID-19. This infodemic hampered pandemic mitigation efforts, resulting in non-compliance with public health measures and delays to the national vaccination programme in the first six months of the pandemic due to widespread vaccine hesitancy or vaccine refusal. Furthermore, it fomented public distrust of the government and other institutions. On…mehr

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Besides being one of the countries most severely affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, Indonesia also experienced a severe âEURoeinfodemicâEUR: an overabundance of contradictory informationâEUR"including misinformation and disinformationâEUR"on COVID-19. This infodemic hampered pandemic mitigation efforts, resulting in non-compliance with public health measures and delays to the national vaccination programme in the first six months of the pandemic due to widespread vaccine hesitancy or vaccine refusal. Furthermore, it fomented public distrust of the government and other institutions. On Indonesian social media, this infodemic engendered a peculiar type of hybrid narrative, combining global conspiracy theories with local moral economies and religious sentiments. Religious micro-influencers were particularly influential in spreading the narrative that the governmentâEUR(TM)s COVID-19 policies could not be trusted, and that COVID-19 vaccines were dangerous and haram. Such posts were often removed in line with the social media platformsâEUR(TM) policies to combat false information on COVID-19, and the individuals who created such content risked prosecution in line with the governmentâEUR(TM)s punitive approach to âEURoehoaxesâEUR. However, this did not lessen the prevalence of anti-vaccine narratives, nor did it mitigate public distrust of the government. The government also contributed to the spiral of distrust through its inconsistent policies, lack of transparency, and mixed messages. Especially in the pandemicâEUR(TM)s early phases, government officials themselves were found spreading misleading information, first to downplay the severity and risk of COVID-19 in order to avoid social unrest, and subsequently to push for a quick reopening of the economy. In prioritizing the economy over public health, considerable resources were spent on influence campaigns to persuade the public to continue business as normal. The influence campaigns appeared to succeed in persuading people to return to work and to get vaccinated eventually. However, public distrust remained and was easily reactivated on social media in response to inconsistencies and double standards in the governmentâEUR(TM)s enforcement of COVID-19 restrictions.

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