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Malaysia
This Week in AsiaPolitics

Boycotts, bans and dough-kissing drama: Malaysia’s social media obsessions in 2024

The power of social media shaped many of Malaysia’s biggest controversies this year

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Upper left: Starbucks suffered financial losses after being targeted by a viral boycott campaign for its alleged support of Israel.  Photo: Getty Images/TNS. A KK Super Mart store in Puchong, Kuala Lumpur. Photo: AP
 Bottom left:  Right: A video showing Alice Chang from Malaysia kissing a piece of dough went viral. Photo: YouTube/funniesvideo
Hadi Azmi
From brand boycotts in support of Palestine and mysterious doughnut-licking employees to the nefarious goings-on at a milk tea chain and a sinkhole horror in Kuala Lumpur – scandal, anger and tragedy marked Malaysia’s social media landscape this year.
In a nation glued to its phones – Malaysians spend nearly three hours daily online on average, an hour more than users in Hong Kong – platforms like TikTok, Facebook, and X are shaping public sentiment like never before and proving to be a bane for both big name brands and politicians.

But the internet has also created more space for bad actors seeking to whip up division and spread scurrilous rumours online, causing real damage to the country’s social fabric – something Malaysian authorities are determined to get a grip on in 2025.

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Here are the high and lows that defined Malaysian social media this year.

Starbucks closed 50 of its outlets in Malaysia as customers snubbed the chain. Photo: TNS
Starbucks closed 50 of its outlets in Malaysia as customers snubbed the chain. Photo: TNS

Boycott bites

McDonald’s, KFC and Starbucks franchises in Malaysia faced a painful consumer backlash this year due to the war in Gaza, with Malaysia’s majority Muslim population linking the US-based chains with support for Israel’s attacks on the enclave.
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