On May 1st news broke online of the conviction of Nur Fitri Azmeer Nordin, a 23 year-old Malaysian studying at Imperial College in London, for possession, distribution and production of child pornography in the UK.

Nur Fitri was arrested in a raid on his home in November 2014. UK police found more than 30,000 images and videos of child pornography along with a life-sized mannequin of a young boy. He was studying there on a scholarship given by Majlis Amanah Rakyat (MARA).

On April 30th, MARA terminated the scholarship. However on May 5th news reports circulated saying that MARA would give him a second chance.

This prompted backlash against MARA online in the form of hashtag-driven campaigns, #NoSecondChance and #KeepPaedophilesAwayFromOurKids. The goal of the campaign was to deny a second chance at a scholarship for Nur Fitri, however it is clear that some users misunderstood ‘second chance’ to mean forgiving him and/or letting him go free and return to Malaysia.

Once #NoSecondChance trended in Malaysia, users who were unaware of the campaign started using it for other reasons e.g. referring to not giving ex-boyfriends a second chance; or retaking exams.

There were also rumours online of Malaysians taking pity on Nur Fitri; seeing his activities as harmless because ‘there is no victim’; and users equating child pornography with adult pornography, and therefore harmless.

2. Analysis

We performed opinion-based analysis on 421 users based in Malaysia who tweeted about Nur Fitri, #NoSecondChance and related terms from May 1st – May 13th 2015. The margin of error is +/- 4.78%.

Users were selected based on their tweet content and activity during this period. Sampling was done per-state based on the current estimated user population.

Spammers, news agencies and accounts with automated tweets were not included in the sample. Users talking solely about other issues (e.g. the cause of paedophilia) or using #NoSecondChance to refer to unrelated issues were also excluded.

From this dataset we analysed the individual Twitter user timelines to determine their opinion. This took their tweets, retweets and conversations into account.

Our goal was to gauge public opinion by Malaysian users on Nur Fitri, specifically how forgiving they were and whether they supported proposals that he be given a ‘second chance’.

Based on this analysis we categorised users as belonging to one of the following categories:
Uncategorised opinions are from users who have no clear opinion that matched the criteria of the other stated categories. The results are shown in the chart below.


#NoSecondChance


3. Findings

What follows are the findings for each category.

3.1 Give Him a Second Chance

8 users (1.90%)

These users believed Nur Fitri deserved a second chance. They appeared motivated by pity and concern that his future may be ruined. Among the main reasons expressed were:

Personal belief in forgiveness
Support him serving his sentence first and being allowed to continue his studies after that
Saw him as a porn watcher ‘just like everyone else’ and therefore a victimless crime


3.2 Treat Him First

11 users (2.61%)

Users who believed that Nur Fitri should be treated first before any further discussion about his future. These users saw him as someone with a mental disease, and some expressed pity for him.


3.3 Don’t Give Him a Second Chance

323 users (76.72%)

Users who believed Nur Fitri did not deserve a second chance. Majority were referring to a scholarship, though it was clear that some believed ‘second chance’ referred to walking freely. Nurin Jazlin’s rape and murder was often mentioned as a reason why paedophiles do not deserve a second chance [3].

For those referring to the scholarship, the following opinions were popularly expressed:

Scholarships for locals are often revoked or denied for minor reasons
The scholarship can be given to more deserving students
A sick individual like him does not deserve funds
General criticism of MARA for even considering a second chance
Some comparisons made between Adam Adli’s suspension from UPSI and Nur Fitri being offered a second chance


3.4 Don’t Forgive Him / Keep Him Imprisoned

58 users (13.78%)

Users who were very harsh in their criticism of Nur Fitri and expressed opinions that indicated no forgiveness. Other than specifically stating that he deserved no forgiveness, common opinions expressed by these users were:

he should be permanently locked up
he should be barred from coming back to Malaysia
hopeful that bad things would happen to him in prison

One major concern for these users was that if Nur Fitri was allowed to go free either now or in the future, he may threaten other children. Nurin Jazlin’s case as well as Nurul Huda’s murder [4] was mentioned by some of these users as justification for their opinion.


3.5 Other Negative Opinions

15 users (3.56%)

Users who were disgusted by what Nur Fitri did or expressing other negative remarks directed at him.


3.6 Uncategorised (No Opinion / Other Opinions)

6 users (1.43%)

Users who were talking about Nur Fitri but not having a clear opinion matching other categories. This included users who were indifferent to what Nur Fitri did because ‘he is just a porn watcher’ and users who felt sorry for him.

4. Additional Opinions

Users tweeting about Nur Fitri also expressed the following opinions/sentiment on related topics. This listing was summarised based on a manual reading of a sample of 789 users in Malaysia, inclusive of the sample used for the above analysis.

These expressions are not indicative of their support for #NoSecondChance, but we are including it here for informative reasons.

4.1 Conspiracy theorists

These users did not believe Nur Fitri was guilty. Their reasons were:

4.2 On the right approach to dealing with paedophiles

These users expressed concern on how the government and society in general views and treats paedophiles. Their main position was that the government should focus on rehabilitation instead of retribution.

Locking them up was seen as no solution. Learning the root causes of paedophilia was considered to be a better approach to dealing with the problem.


4.3 On allegations of the government appealing Nur Fitri’s sentence or MARA giving a second chance

These users included those who believed that the Malaysian government was going to appeal against Nur Fitri’s sentence and bring him home; and those who believed that MARA was going to give a second chance in the form of a scholarship. Their opinions were:

4.4 On the discussion about paedophilia

Many users remarked that Malaysians lack knowledge and understanding on paedophilia, leading them to make ignorant statements such as:
4.5 Other opinions

These are other opinions expressed by a minority of users.

5. Conclusion

The chart below shows the number of users tweeting about the topic each day. Based on the daily activity, the #NoSecondChance campaign and news of MARA offering a second chance helped provoke a response to Nur Fitri’s case. This provocation helped give us data and get a glimpse at users’ views on paedophilia.

#NoSecondChance


The analysis indicates that users in Malaysia would not accept MARA giving Nur Fitri a scholarship. Beyond that, expressions of hatred were more numerous than those in favour of forgiveness or treatment. However these expressions of hatred did not target his family; his race; or his religion.

Islam only featured in expressions of pity for Nur Fitri, where some users prayed that he repent and/or that Allah would help him.

There is also the issue of users who do not see the difference between child pornography and adult pornography, which may have led them to have a neutral position or be supportive of a second chance.

It is clear that Malaysians need to be educated on a number of topics related to paedophilia:

This would help them to understand the issue of paedophilia and know how to discuss it and help to prevent it.

6. About the Population Sample

The results reflect a young demographic, by our estimates to be between 18 – 30 years old. Users were almost evenly divided between Bahasa Malaysia and English speakers:

43% Bahasa Malaysia speakers
45% English speakers
12% Bilingual speakers

#NoSecondChance


6.1 Scale of Importance on Twitter

This network graph shows how Twitter users tweeting about Nur Fitri and the #NoSecondChance campaign from May 1st – May 13th were connected. This includes all users on Twitter limited to those who retweeted or had conversations with each other. This helps visualise the scale of the conversation.


#NoSecondChance


Each user is represented by a node (circle) that is coloured based on the number of their tweets that were retweeted and the number of tweets sent to them. The more attention they receive, the larger the node. Any node that retweets another node or tweets to another node is connected.

Nodes are positioned based on their connections to other nodes – strong connections pull them closer. For example, the cluster of nodes surrounding @khairykj represent users who retweeted him and had little to no interaction with the other nodes in the graph. Large nodes are considered influential within the network.


There are 16,127 users with 22,694 connections within this graph. The most popular users were:

@khairykj
@hafizrayyan
@akem_my
@501awani
@klubbkiddkl
@hmetromy
@real_khk
@sultanmuzaffar
@tsundayrae
@abelljefrry
@hadiharhar
@staronline
@zaffyaffendi
@husnanasser
@shahminazir
@qayzr
@f4izalhassan
@rewan_ishak
@ipansu
@lucaspeebo


7. Popular Content

The following tweets are among the most popularly shared tweets / images on this topic.

Top Mention







8. Location of users

Based on geo-tagged tweets, we are able to determine where users often tweet from. This is indicative of where they spend most of their time e.g. work-place, university, residence.

Blue markers = support; Red markers = not support; Yellow markers = Uncategorised

8.1 West Malaysia


#NoSecondChance


8.2 East Malaysia


#NoSecondChance