Weekly Summary: June week three

A false video of the Wellega Massacre

A Facebook page with more than 196 thousand followers shared a 13-minute and 5-second video on Jun 21, 2022, captioned, “this video shows the massacre in west Wollega”. By the time this article is published the video had more than 83 thousand views and the post was shared more than a thousand times.

HaqCheck inspected the video and found out that the video was first shared on  Jul 23, 2021, on a Facebook Account. The video is captioned, “WBO [OLA] is freeing prisoners, Thousands of WBO commandos are marching to 4killo.”. The post had more than 400 views.

Therefore HaqCheck counterchecked the post and rendered it False.     

TPLF hijacked a plane

A YouTube video premiered on July 23 having a thumbnail and title that reads “TPLF hijacked a plane”. Over two thousand viewers have watched the video so far.

HaqCheck looked into the full content of the video and confirmed that the actual content doesn’t state that TPLF recently hijacked a plane. The video tells that TPLF denied landing a plane in Mekelle. Therefore, the video is rated MISLEADING.

On June 23, 2022, the Ethiopian government accused TPLF of blocking humanitarian aid flights to Mekelle Airport, Tigray.

TPLF, responding to the accusation, stated that the airport has ceased operation due to the absence of fuel to run the facility.

In this context, a video captioned and titled that TPLF hijacked a plane emerged. However, the video explains that TPLF blocked humanitarian aid flights to Mekelle. There is no connection between the thumbnail and title of the video and its actual content.

Therefore, HaqCheck rendered the video MISLEADING due to the absence of relevance between the thumbnail/title and the content.

A manipulated Image

A manipulated image of Amleset Muchie, wife of the pop sensation Tewodros Kassahun was shared on Twitter. The manipulated image shows the Amleset kissing a Kalashnikov rifle.

HaqCheck fact-checked the image and confirmed that the picture was manipulated. The original image was taken from a Facebook page in the name of Amleset Muche and depicts Amleset holding and kissing an arm of a child.

Report on a claimed death of an artist

There was a report on Facebook claiming that Solomon Bogale, an artist died of an illness. The claim stated that the artist was abroad for medical treatment but died within 24 hours of his return back to Addis Ababa.

However, HaqCheck inquired into the claim and confirmed the information was false.

Recommendations

HaqCheck urges social media users to be cautious and cross-check information. They should refrain from sharing unconfirmed information immediately.

We recommend social media content creators be responsible and refrain from fabricating and circulating false claims and misleading statements.

YouTubers are urged to be accurate in reporting and should avoid misleading thumbnails and titles in order to grab people’s attention. YouTube videos with false and misleading titles and thumbnails have been trending recently.

June week two: disinformation trend summary

TPLF rejecting negotiation with the government

Last week, a false video clip emerged on YouTube on June 17, 2022, with a thumbnail title claiming that the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) announced it doesn’t want negotiations with the federal government of Ethiopia.

Though the thumbnail and the title of the video claimed TPLF’s rejection of the negotiation, the content of the video is an explanation of the five preconditions presented by TPLF.

HaqCheck, however, confirmed that the content of the video doesn’t state TPLF’s refusal to negotiate. The content tells that TPLF has presented five non-negotiable conditions to negotiate with the federal government.

Thus, the video clip was rendered MISLEADING because there is no connection or relevance between the video’s thumbnail, title and its actual content.

Dawit Nega passing away after being beaten in Addis Ababa

False claim came out after the news of the death of Dawit Nega, a popular Tigrinya singer. They claimed that the singer was dead after being beaten by Eritreans in Addis Ababa.

However, the claim was proven false. BBC News Tigrinya interviewed Dawit Nega’s family and confirmed he was dead shortly after a pneumonia illness. He was taken to Addis Hiwot Hospital for treatment but passed away within a few days.

Imposter Twitter account

HaqCheck observed imposter content on Twitter last week. A Twitter account created in the name of Addis Ababa Police shared information that sex toys were caught in Bole.

However, HaqCheck confirmed that the account was not the official Twitter account of the Addis Ababa Commission. The city’s police commission has its own authentic and verified Twitter account.

The imposter’s Twitter account was later changed from ‘Addis Ababa Police’ to ‘Dark Nigga’ after sharing the viral tweet.

Recommendations

HaqCheck urges social media users to be cautious of false information and imposter accounts. They should look for authentic accounts and search if the information originated from there.

They should cross-check information by resorting to mainstream media outlets and fact-checking organizations.

Social media content creators are recommended to be responsible and refrain from circulating false and unverified content across social media platforms.

YouTube has been a major platform for false and misleading content. We observe YouTube channels disseminating misleading and false titles, thumbnails, and information to seek audiences’ attention given its financial incentives for viewership. HaqCheck urges YouTubers to avoid disinforming users across social media.

June week one: disinformation trend summary

The week was relatively calm compared to the previous weeks. Major controversies and disinformation trends had not been observed during the week.

This summary discusses the false claims debunked by HaqCheck and a controversy that came out at the end of the week.

Government forces destroyed properties that belong to Zemene Kase’s mother

A Facebook page shared an image claiming that government forces burned and destroyed properties belonging to the mother of Zemene Kasse, a Fano militia leader in the Amhara regional state.

The post explains that the forces demolished the properties by government forces looking to arrest the Fano leader.

Different social media posts were also observed reporting the properties of Zemene Kasse’s families were destroyed by federal and regional forces. 

However, HaqCheck found the image alongside other three pictures posted on Jan 23 previously on a Twitter account with more than 13 thousand followers captioned in Affan Oromo, “These pictures show the damage the armed forces, who came here crossing the Nile, did to Oromo farmers in #Amuruu District of Horroo Guduruu Region.”

Therefore, HaqCheck confirmed that the image doesn’t prove the claim and rated the post False.

Yemane Gebremeskel is Eritrea’s Foreign Minister

A video claiming that Yemane Gebremeskel is the Foreign Minister of Eritrea was published on YouTube on June 9, 2022. The video explains that while Ethiopia’s relations with the United States have recently improved, Eritrea’s on the contrary worsened. It is stated in the video that ‘Eritrea’s Foreign Minister Yemane Gebremeskel’ and the US embassy in Asmara have been quarreling over political, international, and religious issues signaling the deterioration of the relationship between the two countries.

It is true that senior Eritrean official Yemane Gebremeskel and the US Embassy in Asmara have been observed to debate on social media on various issues.

However, Yemane Gebremeskel is Eritrea’s Information Minister, not Foreign Minister. The Minister of Foreign Affairs of Eritrea is named Osman Salih.

Yemane was appointed Information Minister in 2015 after the former Minister Ali Abdu defected. Previously, he was Chief of Staff of the Office of the Eritrean President.

Thus, HaqCheck confirmed that Yemane Gebremeskel is not Eritrea’s Foreign Minister, debunked the claim, and rated it False.

TPLF abandoning its ownership claim to Wolkait-Humera territories

At the end of the week, a news article came out claiming that negotiations will be held between the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) and the Ethiopian government in June 2022 in Arusha, Tanzania. The French newspaper Le Monde stated that it obtained the information from Western and African diplomats close to the case.

Same reportings emerged citing the French newspaper that TPLF gradually abandoned its claim to ‘Western Tigray’ territories.

Getachew Reda, a spokesman of TPLF denied the report that TPLF is abandoning the claim to the contested territories in a tweet he made.

Recommendations

As we always do, we recommend social media users be cautious and cross-check information. They should avoid sharing unconfirmed information instantly.

Social media content creators are urged to be responsible and refrain from fabricating and circulating false claims.

Government and other authorities should avail sufficient information regarding timely issues. The government should also ensure full access to information for the media, public, and other entities.

Media organizations and news outlets should offer their audience accurate and sufficing information about controversial issues.

Monthly disinformation analysis: May 2022

This analysis covered the disinformation and controversy trends observed during May 2022. These trends were mainly observed across various social media platforms.

The unsettled war in the northern parts of Ethiopia remained among the major factors of controversy and false information.

Fresh military engagements and full-scale war

Unconfirmed reports of recent military engagements among the belligerents of the armed conflict in the northern part of the country came out during May. It caused concerns that a full-scale war may erupt again between the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) and federal-led allied forces amid a hype of war preparations and warnings by warring parties.

This scenario was instantly accompanied by false claims. Most of the false claims that followed this situation used old and false images in a bid to prove different claims.

HaqCheck debunked an image-backed claim made on a Telegram channel that TPLF forces opened a new attack in the Tigray-Amhara border areas. It is confirmed that the image doesn’t show a new military engagement of a recent incursion by the TPLF forces and was taken during the Ethio-Eritrea border war two decades ago and was published in 2019 on a photo archive website called Negative Colors. It was used in an article written about the evolution of the Ethiopia-Eritrea relations from the border war to the recent rapprochement.

Another related claim was that TPLF was mobilizing armed forces to launch a new attack. The Facebook post shared an image that reads, “it was stated that TPLF has already organized itself and is launching the war”.

However, the image was found to be taken by photographer Ben Curtis on May 8, 2021, in Agulae, Tigray, and shows Ethiopian government soldiers riding in the back of a truck on a road.

Moreover, there was a claim that Eritrea destroyed more than thirteen thousand TPLF soldiers in a recent battle provoked by TPLF. The Facebook post shared a false image that also was used to support another claim at the same time.

A post emerged after a report by BBC that on May 8, Tigray forces launched a heavy artillery attack on areas bordering Eritrea.

However, the image used in the post was old and doesn’t support the claim. The image shows Eritrean army soldiers during the Ethio-Eritrea border war two decades ago.

Twitter becomes a platform for disinformation and controversy

The social media networking platform Twitter is becoming a major arena for disinformation and controversies in the Ethiopian social media landscape.

HaqCheck debunked false image-backed claims on Twitter recently. It has also become a site for controversial claims mainly regarding evolving political matters in Ethiopia.

The controversial claim that Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed met with TPLF senior leaders in Nigeria was first made on Twitter. It grabbed social media users’ attention and the government denied the PM didn’t meet with the mentioned people.

Some false claims were also tracked on Twitter and fact-checked during May 2022.

For instance, a Twitter account with more than 1,100 followers shared three images on May 24 to support a claim that a public uprising recently erupted in Tigray and the people of Tigray demanded Abiy govern them. The tweet got many retweets and reactions.

However, HaqCheck found the two images on a previous Facebook post from DW Amharic on Oct 2, 2018, captioned, “university students and their families protested in the streets of Mekelle, Tigray. We will not send our students to unsafe places, our students should not make a meaningless sacrifice, states and the federal government should solve this issue,” were some of the writings printed on the posters held in the protest. 

The third image was found on borkena.com in an article on June 27, 2018, titled, “Fresh ethnic-based violence in Asossa left at least eight people dead.”

These instances imply that Twitter has become the major social media space for such disinformation and controversial claims.

Random misinformation

Furthermore, we observed that random claims that emerged out of nowhere appeared during the month. Many claims follow events and contexts. But there were false claims that came with no traceable context or incidence.

Random false information published by a website that Ethiopia’s Lake Langano is found in the Gambella Regional State was fact-checked. However, Langano Lake is found in Oromia Regional State 200 kilometers by road south of Addis Ababa, on the border between the East Shewa Zone and Arsi Zones.

Therefore, the claim was confirmed False by HaqCheck.

Imposter images

Claims that used imposter or manipulated images emerged in the Ethiopian social media landscape.

This trend has been increasing recently. Images would be manipulated to support other unrelated claims.

For example, an image claimed to be a screenshot of a news report by the Ethiopian Broadcasting Corporation (EBC) was posted on Facebook with a claim that circulating on social media claiming to show a screenshot of a news report by the Ethiopian Broadcasting Corporation (EBC).

The image shows a picture of Shimels Abdisa, President of the Oromia Regional State, giving a speech. The Amharic caption on the image reads “The law enforcement operation we launched in the Amhara region is being conducted successfully.”

The image was taken from previous posts and edited and the overlay text was altered. HaqCheck confirmed that the picture of Shimelis Abdisa captioned by EBC was shared in his statement during Eid al-Fitr last year in 2021.

Screenshots accompanying false claims

A trend of using screenshots to support claims has been observed recently. HaqCheck debunked claims accompanied with screenshots.

On May 25, 2022, a tweet appeared claiming that Eritrean security officials recently revealed that Ethio 360 and Ethio Forum discussed online with senior TPLF leaders and agreed to work together to incite conflict and instability in Ethiopia.

The tweet presented a screenshot of a text written in Tigrinya to support the claim.

However, the screenshot text that reads the mentioned bodies held an online meeting and agreed to work hand in hand to sow conflict and instability in the country doesn’t confirm the claim. It was cropped from a Facebook post made on May 23, 2022. The Facebook post was made by a page named ‘Center for research and Documentation’ which claimed to be a news and media website. The page claimed that it got the information from its exclusive sources.

Scam

An element of scam was also tracked on social media sites targeting audiences. Telegram channels are also becoming a haven for scams and content with fraud elements.

A Telegram message was debunked that claimed that the US government offered twenty thousand jobs in the US for Ethiopians.

The channel by the name of “US Embassy Addis Ababa” with more than 127,000 subscribers imposters a message in the name of the US embassy in Ethiopia and appealed to subscribers to register and apply for the job.

The message requests to fill in personal information such as name, phone number, Address, and others. 

The US Embassy in Ethiopia later posted a statement on its official Facebook page on May 26 saying that “there are fake posts about employment and visa opportunities in the United States on various social media platforms.  All legitimate employment opportunities at the U.S. Embassy are posted on our website…”

Recommendations

HaqCheck urges social media users to be cautious and cross-check information rather than accepting and sharing instantly. They should look for original and trustable sources for matters.

It is recommended that social media content creators refrain from circulating false information. They should be responsible.

The government should guarantee full and open access to information to the media and public. Concerned government authorities should offer timely and sufficient information.

We urge political parties, media outlets, government offices, and other interest group entities to give the media and audiences accurate information.

May week four: disinformation trend summary

A photoshop claiming to be news by EBC

An image circulating on social media claiming to show a screenshot of a news report by the Ethiopian Broadcasting Corporation (EBC) caught our attention last week. 

The image shows a picture of Shimels Abdisa, President of the Oromia Regional State, giving a speech. The Amharic caption on the image reads “The law enforcement we started In the Amhara region is successfully continuing.”

However, HaqCheck analyzed the image and confirmed that it was altered. According to the media monitoring result, the news in the image, which has been circulating since May 23, has not been published by EBC. Instead, it has been manipulated and disseminated on social media.

Moreover, HaqCheck noted that the picture of Shimelis Abdisa is not recent and was shared in his statement during Eid al-Fitr last year in 2021. 

An image claiming to show a recent rally in Tigray 

A Twitter account with more than 1100 followers shared a post on May 24, 2022, captioned, “In Tigray, there has been a civil unrest, and the people of Tigray are saying, ‘May abiy Ahmed lead us’”.

By the time this article was published the post had more than 80 reactions and was retweeted more than 30 times.

HaqCheck found the two images on a previous Facebook post from DW Amharic on Oct 2, 2018, captioned, “university students and their families protested in the streets of Mekelle, Tigray. We will not send our students to unsafe places, our students should not make a meaningless sacrifice, states and the federal government should solve this issue,” were some of the writings printed on the posters held in the protest. 

The third image was found on borkena.com in an article on June 27, 2018, titled, “Fresh ethnic-based violence in Asossa left at least eight people dead.”

A tweet claiming to show Eritrean security officials recently revealed Ethio 360 and Ethio Forum agreed to work together

A viral tweet appeared on May 25, 2022, claiming that Eritrean security officials recently revealed that Ethio 360 and Ethio Forum discussed online with senior TPLF leaders and agreed to work together. The tweet implicitly accused the media outlets of echoing ‘TPLF’s agenda’.

It presented a screenshot of a text written in Tigrinya in a bid to support the claim.

However, HaqCheck looked into the case and confirmed the screenshot doesn’t confirm that Eritrean security officials claimed to reveal the three mentioned entities recently discussed and agreed to work together.

HaqCheck checked the screenshot to examine whether it proves the claim. However, the screenshot was taken from a Facebook post made on May 23, 2022. The Facebook post was made by a page named ‘Center for research and Documentation’ which claimed to be a news and media website. The page claimed that it got the information that there was an online discussion in which TPLF senior leaders, Ethio Forum, Ethio 360, and members of Digital Weyane participated from its exclusive sources.

Thus, HaqCheck rated the tweet FALSE because the screenshot doesn’t prove the claim that Eritrean security officials revealed there was a discussion among the mentioned parties.

A scam in the name of the US Embassy in Addis Ababa

A Telegram channel by the name of “US Embassy Addis Ababa” with more than 127,000 subscribers posted a job vacancy claiming to be posted by the embassy. The message reads “The US Embassy has created 20,000 jobs in the United States to support the war-torn Ethiopian economy and to strengthen the centuries-old US-Ethiopian friendship. The benefit of this opportunity will include the coverage of cost of transportation, and housing by the embassy.”  

The message later requests to fill in personal information such as name, phone number, Address, and others. 

However, The US Embassy in Ethiopia posted a statement on its official Facebook page on May 26 saying that “there are fake posts about employment and visa opportunities in the United States on various social media platforms.  All legitimate employment opportunities at the U.S. Embassy are posted on our website…” The statement also adds, “The U.S. government will not request personal information via email, Facebook messenger, Telegram, or other social media platforms.  Please do not fall victim to scams.”

Recommendations

We recommend social media users be cautious and cross-check information including the authenticity and source. As photoshops, false screenshots, and other new cunning trends are being observed lately they have to look for additional information and credible accounts. 

Scams such as the one mentioned in this summary are being circulated widely. And users should be careful from giving their personal information to unverified sources and should take a moment to check the legitimacy of the source.

HaqCheck urges social media content creators to refrain from fabricating and circulating false information. They should feel responsible and share verified and factual information with their audiences.

Since an open access to information is one of the solutions to tackle disinformation we urge the government and all stakeholders to ensure full and unlimited access to information. The public and media should enjoy full access to information. Besides, the government should give timely and sufficient updates on ongoing and controversial issues.

Weekly disinformation summary: May week three

Ethiopia’s C-130 Hercules jets

One of the false claims fact-checked by HaqCheck last week was an image-backed claim that the pictures in the Facebook post show Ethiopia’s C-130 Hercules jets.

The post emerged sharing five different images to support the claim that Ethiopia owns many C-130 Hercules jets.

Four out of the five pictures were false and don’t prove the claim. They were taken from other publications.

One C-130 Hercules aircraft was given to Ethiopia by the US government on June 6, 2018, delivered to help the country in its peacekeeping operations.

The fifth image shows the C-130 Hercules jet the US gave Ethiopia in June 2018.

However, four of the five images are found to be taken from old videos published on Youtube and other platforms. A link is given to check out where each image was taken from.

Thus, HaqCheck rated the post False.

ENDF troops joining OLA

Another claim investigated last week was a Facebook post sharing a picture alleging that several members of the Ethiopian Defence Forces (ENDF) were joining the Oromo Liberation Army, addressed by the government as OLF-Shane.

However, HaqCheck looked into the image and found out that the picture doesn’t support the claim that ENDF soldiers joining OLA.

The image was published for the first time on a Facebook page on Oct 31, 2021, with a claim that the Ethiopian army was being disbanded due to the battles with the Tigray People’s Liberation Front at the time.

Therefore, the post was rated False because it used an inaccurate image to prove the claim.

A controversial video

A video emerged on social media last week provoking controversies. The video shows armed men shooting people who seemingly wear military uniforms.

The shooters spoke Tigrinya according to the video recording.

The video unleashed many claims and a controversy surfaced particularly on the Tigrinya social media landscape last week.

Some claimed that the video shows TPLF soldiers killing Afar special police force officers.

Some alleged that it shows TPLF troops shooting and killing Eritrean refugees who live in Tigray.

Others claimed that the video showed TPLF soldiers killing Eritrean troops during a battle. Getachew Reda, a senior member of the TPLF higher leadership denied the claim that the video showed TPLF troops killing Eritrean soldiers in a post he made on Facebook. He rather claimed the video was fabricated by the Eritrean government and the shooters were Eritrean soldiers.

TPLF launching a new attack

Another claim last week that was fact-checked by HaqCheck was a claim that TPLF was mobilizing armed forces to launch a new attack. The Facebook post appeared last week sharing an image that reads, “it was stated that TPLF has already organized itself and is launching the war”.

However, HaqCheck interrogated the image and found out that the picture was old and doesn’t prove the claim.

The image was taken by photographer Ben Curtis on May 8, 2021, in Agulae, Tigray, and shows Ethiopian government soldiers riding in the back of a truck on a road.

Therefore HaqCheck rated it FALSE because of its usage of an inaccurate image to support the claim.

Recommendations

As we always do we recommend social media users be cautious and cross-check information including the authenticity and source. They have to look for additional information and credible accounts.

HaqCheck urges social media content creators to refrain from fabricating and circulating false information. They should avoid false information dissemination knowing and unknowingly.

We urge the government to ensure full and unlimited access to information. The public and media should enjoy full access to information. Besides, the government should give timely and sufficient updates on ongoing and controversial issues.

Weekly disinformation and controversy summary: May week two

The University of Gondar aiding the demolition of mass graves

One of the controversial issues that appeared on the Ethiopian social media platform was the report that the University of Gondar aided in removing the dead bodies of Tigrayans on which the government is alleged to commit ethnic cleansing in  Welkait, an effort claimed to be disposing of evidence.

A report was published by BBC that Amhara regional authorities destructed mass graves of Tigrayans amid the UN planned investigation into violations.

The report claimed it interviewed fifteen eyewitnesses and confirmed that the dead bodies of hundreds of people were deliberately destroyed in an organized campaign to dispose of evidence of ethnic cleansing in the west of Ethiopia’s Tigray region. It stated that researchers from the university supervised the disposal of dead bodies of ethnic Tigrayans.

This counterclaim came out after a month when Amhara regional authorities claimed that with the cooperation of researchers from the University of Gondar they discovered mass graves of ethnic Amharas that were massacred by TPLF three decades ago in the areas.

The University of Gondar in a letter it wrote to BBC denied the report that its researchers aided the destruction of mass graves containing bodies of Tigrayans. It also stated that the mass graves found by its researchers a month ago were of remains of ethnic Amharas massacred by TPLF.

The journalist also claimed that she sent a letter to the university to confirm the report and didn’t get any response.

A fresh incursion by TPLF forces

Another false information that appeared on social media last week was a claim accompanied by an old and false image. HaqCheck looked into the claim that Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) forces opened a new attack in the Tigray-Amhara border areas.

The claim emerged on a Telegram channel amid fear of a fresh military engagement between the TPLF and federal-led allied forces may occur.

However, we confirmed that the image doesn’t show a new military engagement of a recent incursion by the TPLF forces. HaqCheck found out that the image was taken during the Ethio-Eritrea border war two decades ago and was published in 2019. It was used in an article written about the evolution of the Ethiopia-Eritrea relations from the border war to the recent rapprochement.

The claim was, therefore, rated FALSE.

Eritrea ousted over thirteen thousand TPLF troops in a recent battle

The image that was mentioned above was also used in this claim that Eritrea destroyed more than thirteen thousand TPLF soldiers in a recent battle provoked by TPLF.

The Facebook post claimed that it was after TPLF attacked the Eritrean army on the night of May 8, 2022, on Badme and Rama fronts.

The post emerged after a report by BBC that on May 8, Tigray forces launched a heavy artillery attack on areas bordering Eritrea.

However, the image used in the post was old and doesn’t support the claim that Eritrea demised thirteen TPLF troops during the alleged engagement spaned for a night. The image does show Eritrean army soldiers during the Ethio-Eritrea border war two decades ago. Thus, HaqCheck rendered the post ‘FALSE’.

Lake Langano being found in Gambella Regional State

A website published a report claiming that the Ethiopia’s Lake Langano is found in the Gambella Regional State.

Langano Lake is found in Oromia Regional State 200 kilometers by road south of the capital, Addis Ababa, on the border between the East Shewa Zone and Arsi Zones. It is located near the lakes of Shalla and Abijatta.

Therefore, we confirmed the lake is found in the Oromia region, not Gambella, and rated the claim False.

The Ethiopian government recently sent troops to Wollega

A Facebook post emerged in the week sharing images with a claim that the Ethiopian government recently deployed soldiers to Wollega amid heavy fighting between the government and the Oromo Liberation Army- addressed by the government as Shane.

The post shared two images to support the claim. The first image shows convoys of military Urals and the second picture shows convoys of TATA Marcopolo buses.

HaqCheck cross-checked the images and found out that one of the two images was false. We confirmed that the first image doesn’t support the claim. The image was published in February 2021 in a Facebook post report that the Ethiopian National Defence Forces (ENDF)- Western Command demonstrated its preparedness to defend the country’s sovereignty.

Recommendations

Media outlets should avoid making inaccurate reports and be responsible for delivering correct information to their respective audience.

Social media content creators and figures are urged to refrain from feeding social media platforms with false and misleading information.

The government should also ensure open and full access to information for the media and the wider public. It is recommended to avail timely and sufficient information regarding ongoing matters.

Social media users are urged to be cautious and cross-check information before they share it with others or before simply adopting it.

Monthly disinformation trend analysis: April 2022

The trend of disinformation on mainstream and social media during April is observed to decline from the previous month.

The content of the controversies and false information appeared to have evolved to include issues not related to the armed conflict between the TPLF and the federal government.

Some major controversies including the Gondar inter-religious violence, and the Wolkait mass grave emerged during the month.

The information disorder trend observed by HaqCheck during April is analyzed below.

Conflicting narratives: claims and counterclaims

The trend of conflicting narratives has dominated media landscapes. As incidents occur, claims and counterclaims immediately emerge. Two or more conflicting narratives come to dominate.

It was observed that this trend has grown with intentional disinformation and misleading content.

Gonder inter-religious violence

Immediately after the Gondar violence where tens of Muslims got killed at the end of the month was reported, controversial claims and counterclaims emerged. The regional government claimed that the conflict started as a quarrel among a few people. On the other side, a counterclaim that asserts unidentified armed units were intentionally present at the funeral ceremony and instantly attacked Muslim attendants indiscriminately.

Wolkait mass grave controversy

A controversy arose after a report that the University of Gondar found mass graves of ethnic Amharas, killed and buried by the Tigray Peoples Liberation Front (TPLF) since 1982.

Counterclaims came out instantly alleging that the Amhara regional government was intending to clear the trace of dead bodies of ethnic Tigrayans killed by the government itself amid the decision by the UN to dispatch the independent investigative commission into human rights violations.

Misinformative and controversial contents

Misinformation content was seen at the beginning of the month. Most of these contents have had no disinformation intentions and some were false claims by interset groups.

State-affiliated media outlets reported that the American Congress decided to drop the draft bills of S3199 and HR6600.

However, later on, it was confirmed that there was no recent development of the bills after they were sent to the US Congress.

Another misinformation was observed regarding the 300 million dollar World Bank financial support to Ethiopia. Instantly, some reported that the support was a loan and some stated that it was a grant.

It was however checked that the fund was a grant to Ethiopia to help the country deal with the aftermath of conflict.

In the middle of the month, Balderas Party and others claimed that Addis Ababa City Administration decided to demolish the compounds of the Lion Pharmacy and Neon Addis found in Piassa and the lots are going to be given to business people affiliated with the government.

Later on, a news outlet came up with a report that the compounds will not be demolished and are going to be renovated without damaging them.

Image-supported false claims

For some years the information disorder on social media has been mainly dominated by image-backed claims and counterclaims. This trend has recently lessened.

However, the use of false images to support a claim has not ceased. Image-supported false claims appeared on social media in April.

HaqCheck fact-checked an image-backed Facebook post claiming that public places in the Lemi Kura sub-city, Addis Ababa were being grabbed and plowed.

The image was taken from an old online publication in May 2019 along with an article alleging that football fields were becoming farms in the city.

A Facebook claim with an image that the Oromo Liberation Army (OLA) captured many soldiers belonging to the Ethiopian government was another image supported disinformation piece.

HaqCheck checked the image and confirmed that the image appeared first on a Facebook post published on Jul 4, 2021.

The conflict between OLA and the government had been one major source of online information disorder. Many images appeared supporting claims regarding the conflict between the belligerents.

Additionally, an image-backed post claimed that an OLF-Shane soldier was arrested by Fano in Shoa.

HaqCheck investigated the image and found out that the image was first posted on Feb 12, 2022, on Facebook reporting that the government was imprisoning innocent civilians in Oromia.

Recycling old information and claims

The trend of presenting old information and false claims were observed during April. Posts used old reports to convince or mislead people that the information is new.

On Apr 18, a claim presenting a screenshot of a tweet appeared alleging that Eritrea recently agreed to withdraw its troops from Ethiopia’s Tigray Regional State. The screenshot was taken from a tweet made by Reuters last year.

The information was old. Eritrea agreed to withdraw soldiers from Ethiopia a year ago and as reported by Reuters.

A Facebook post appeared on Apr 25, sharing a screenshot of a tweet that reads, “Rwandan President Paul Kagame called on the Biden administration and the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) to directly intervene in the disputed Tigray region in Ethiopia.”

The tweet from which the screenshot was captured was made last year falsely claiming that the President demanded the US and UNSC direct intervention in Ethiopia.

Recommendations

Social media content creators should be responsible and refrain from circulating false information.

We recommend the government offer the media and public timely and sufficient information and open access to information should be ensured.

Social media users are urged to be cautious and need to cross-check claims and reports.

Political parties, media outlets, government offices, and any other interest group entities should not provide false information.

May week one disinformation and controversy summary

Last week’s social media disinformation trend was relatively low. There was no major controversial and disinformation content on the social and mainstream media during the week.

However, here are some of the controversial and false claims tracked by HaqCheck last week.

Captured Italian soldiers

HaqCheck came across an image-backed post on Facebook on May 3, that claims the picture in the post shows Italian soldiers who surrendered to the Ethiopian army in the battle of Adwa thirteen decades ago.

The image portrays a black soldier guarding a group of white soldiers.

The Facebook post was viral and was shared over three hundred times.

The post was made two days before the 81st commemoration of the Ethiopian Patriots Day celebrated on May 5, 2022. The day marks the end of the secons Italian invasion of Ethiopia and the arrival of Emperor Haile Selassie from exile in Addis Ababa on May 5, 1941.

However, HaqCheck interrogated and confirmed that the image doesn’t prove the claim. It doesn’t show Italian troops who surrendered to Ethiopians in the battle. The same image was also fact-checked by HaqCheck last year.

Our fact-checking revealed that the image, taken in April 1945 was published on various sites including Encyclopedia. The sites state that the image shows a black American soldier of the 12th Armored Division guarding over a group of Nazi war prisoners captured in a forest in Germany during WWII. Therefore, HaqCheck rendered the claim FALSE due to the usage of an inaccurate image.

OFC’s controversial claim that Fano burned mosques in Fnote Selam

The Oromo Federalist Congress issued a press statement last week on May 1, 2022, and reported that Fano, (an Amhara volunteer youth militia) burned mosques in Finote Selam, a town in the West Gojjam Zone of Amhara regional state.

Finote Selam: the first version of the OFC statement

Debark: an edited version of OFC’s statement

The claim by the political party that Fano recently burned mosques in the town of Finote Selam was followed by a counterclaim that refutes the information was false.

The Amhara regional communications office published a social media article and announced the claim by OFC was not true. The communication office reported that it contacted the deputy Imam of the Selam Mosque in the town and confirmed the claim was false.

A few minutes later after the statement was released by Amhara Communications, OFC edited the press release and changed the name of the place from Finote Selam to Debark. Anyone can check the editing history of the press statement on Facebook.

Recommendations

HaqCheck recommends social media users cross-check information they come across on social media platforms before they react or share it with others. They should be cautious of claims and counterclaims on social media.

They should also look for editing histories of social media posts, particularly on Facebook. It is advised to read the whole information to sort out what exactly is the claim when they see posts.

We urge social media users and other entities to look for fact-checks done by fact-checking outlets.

Political parties and figures are urged to be responsible and abstain from disseminating false information. The government should also open up information access to the media and the public and give timely and sufficient information to prevent or reduce tendencies of disinformation.

April: week four disinformation trend summary

Last week, the Ethiopian social media landscape was dominated by controversies and false claims regarding the inter-religious conflict and violence in Gondar and other areas.

The incident was a source of controversy and false claims mainly on social media.

Two lines of the narrative

The first controversy that came out was about the cause of the conflict in Gondar. The Amhara Media Corporation reported that the conflict arose after the funeral ceremony when attendants of the burial took stones from a nearby church.

The second claim regarding the starting of the inter-religious conflict came out instantly. The Amhara Islamic Affairs High Council issued a statement and stated that the conflict occurred when armed people reach the burial place before the dead body reached there and they prevented the corpse would not rest in the particular place. It claimed that the people armed with heavy weapons came from other areas and reached the burial place which is a mosque before the attendants even reached there.

Media reports that supported the second line of the story had also been made.

A controversial image used by the Guardian

The Guardian released a news article in which it used a controversial image. The image shows a woman with a child. The article was about Tigrayan ethnic cleansing from Humera and Welkait.

After the article was issued, claims appeared that the image doesn’t show Tigrayans that were ethnically cleansed from the mentioned area. Many claimed that the image was taken from the Sekota areas and shows displaced people of the Agew people amid the war between the TPLF and the federal-allied government.

However, the media house replaced the image with another one later on.

Paul Kagame called for UNSC and USA direct intervention in Ethiopia

A social media claim appeared last week that the Rwandan President Paul Kagame recently called for the United Nations Security Council and the US to directly intervene in Ethiopia to end the Tigray war. The Facebook post used a screenshot of a tweet to mislead readers. The screenshot itself was taken from a tweet made a year ago.

The same claim appeared last year that Kagame called upon the US and UNSC to directly interfere in Ethiopia to end the armed conflict in Tigray. This claim was later proven false.

Thus, the Facebook post screenshotted the tweet and posted pretending that the information was recent.

Therefore, HaqCheck investigated the claim and confirmed that the screenshot was taken from a tweet made a year ago and the claim was false.

Captured OLA troop

There was a Facebook post sharing an image claiming that it shows a captured OLA soldier. The image shows many people in army uniforms and a uniformed roped man.

However, HaqCheck confirmed that the image doesn’t prove the claim that the man on the image was a recently captured OLA soldier. The image was posted on Feb 12, 2022, with a description that Oromia police imprisoned many innocent Oromos who were suspected of having a connection to the OLA.

Altered image shared on Facebook

An image of an active Muslim rights activist was shared on Facebook that shows a man standing holding high a paper that reads, “We the extremist Muslims are the perpetrators in the Gondar conflict.”

The post was made with the intention that extremist Muslims were accountable for the inter-religious violence in Gondar.

HaqCheck’s reverse image check found out that the image was altered. The original image was posted on Apr 8, 2022, and the text on the paper reads, “Our faith is our soul; our education is our body.”

Thus, HaqCheck rated the claim Altered.

Recommendations

We recommend that social media users should always be cautious and skeptical of information and claims on social media. They should check original sources of information and crosscheck claims.

HaqCheck urges social media content creators to abstain from composing and circulating false information across platforms. They should be responsible that their social media posts may cause offline violence.

The government and respective government bodies are also urged to give sufficient and updated information regarding issues on controversies.

HaqCheck also recommends media outlets use accurate images when publishing content and provide images with proper descriptions.

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