
Old footage of Indonesia fire falsely shared as Barcelona mosque blaze
The shared footage shows a domed roof with an Islamic star-and-crescent moon fitting engulfed in flames, with sticker text that reads, "The Spanish have burned the Islamist Piera mosque in Barcelona and is now being investigated by police".
A photo of a room with blue floors and another of a similar burnt down room are overlaid on the clip as it plays.
Image
Screenshot of the false X post taken July 21, 2025, with a red X mark added by AFP
The clip surfaced across social media in German, Spanish and French after a mosque in Barcelona's Piera municipality was gutted by a fire on July 12, two days before its scheduled inauguration (archived link). No casualties were reported.
According to various news reports, local police stated traces of accelerant were found inside the building and that the fire appears to have been deliberately set (archived links and here).
Local residents have staged protests in the wake of the fire, with some calling the incident a "hate crime" (archived link).
However, the circulating footage is from Indonesia, not Spain.
A reverse image search on Google using keyframes from the clip found it was published on TikTok by Indonesian news outlet Tribun Cirebon on October 19, 2022 (archived link).
The video is captioned: "Dome of Jakarta Islamic Center Grand Mosque engulfed in flames".
Image
Screenshot comparison of the clip shared in the false posts (left) and the TikTok video by Tribun Cirebon (right)
AFP reported the blaze led to the collapse of the dome of the mosque in Jakarta, which was undergoing renovations at the time (archived link). No one was injured in the incident.
Footage of the dome's collapse was also published by AFP (archived link).
(AFPTV / Sibarani)
Google Street View imagery of the Grand Mosque in Jakarta also shows similar structures seen in the circulating video.
Image
Screenshot comparison of the video in the false posts (left) and the Google Street View imagery of the Jakarta mosque (right), with similar elements highlighted by AFP
Reverse image searches found the two photos overlaid on the circulating clip genuinely show the damaged Barcelona mosque and were published in local media reports about the fire (archived links ).

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France 24
2 hours ago
- France 24
Russia kills 25 in Ukraine, as Kremlin says 'committed' to peace
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Local France
3 hours ago
- Local France
Violent videos draw more French teens into 'terror' plots, say prosecutors
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AFP
6 hours ago
- AFP
Photo of US aircraft dropping fire retardant falsely linked to Thailand-Cambodia conflict
"Thailand has used poisonous smoke weapon against Cambodia," reads the Khmer-language caption of a Facebook image shared on the verified page of Cambodian Secretary of State Vengsrun Kuoch on July 28, 2025. The image, which was shared more than 6,300 times, shows what appears to be pink smoke being dropped from an aircraft over a hilly area. A Thai flag is superimposed over the image with text reading, "Thai troops use poison gas to kill Cambodian civilians". Image Screenshot of the false Facebook post captured on July 29, 2025, with a red X added by AFP The same image was also shared thousands of times across social media before Thailand and Cambodia agreed to an unconditional ceasefire to end their bloodiest military clashes in more than a decade (archived link). The fighting, over a smattering of ancient temples in disputed zones along their 800-kilometre (500-mile) border, has killed at least 42 people and displaced more than 300,000. Prior to the peace talks, Cambodia's defence ministry accused the Thai air force of deploying "poison gas" during the fighting -- an accusation Thailand's foreign affairs ministry rejected as "baseless" (archived here and here). The image circulating online does not show a Thai air force jet using a chemical weapon. A reverse image search on Google led to the same photo published on January 11 in a report by the Reuters news agency about efforts to put out the Palisades fire, the largest conflagration during the Los Angeles wildfires (archived link). The fires around the United States' second-largest city burned for three weeks, killing at least 30 people and forcing thousands of residents to evacuate their homes (archived link). The photo is captioned: "An air tanker drops fire retardant at the Palisades Fire, as seen from Woodland Hills, January 11. REUTERS/Ringo Chiu." Image Screenshot comparison of the falsely shared image (left) and the Reuters photo (right) According to a report by Canadian broadcaster CBC, the fire retardant -- a pink powder -- is dropped by planes ahead of the fire's path to slow the flames and allow time to build fire lines (archived link). Further keyword searches based on the plane's livery seen in the Reuters photo found the aircraft belongs to 10 Tanker, a company that specialises in dropping fire retardant (archived link). AFP has also debunked other misinformation about the Thailand-Cambodia conflict.