logo
Disinformation catalyses anti-migrant unrest in Spain

Disinformation catalyses anti-migrant unrest in Spain

France 2418-07-2025
Last weekend's unrest in the southeastern town of Torre Pacheco pitted far-right groups against immigrant residents, mainly of Moroccan origin, but a heavy police presence prevented serious confrontations.
The altercations were sparked after a 68-year-old pensioner said three men of North African origin attacked him without provocation on July 9.
Two days later, the conservative-led city council organised a protest against insecurity, which quickly escalated when far-right groups joined with hostile slogans against immigrants.
That day, and for several nights, riots broke out in the streets of the southeastern city of 40,000.
Authorities have arrested 14 people, including three suspected of involvement in the attack on the retiree.
Also among those detained is the leader of the far-right "Deport Them Now" group, who allegedly called for a "hunt" of migrants on social media.
The sudden outbreak of violence took Spain by surprise but anti-migrant discourse had already been brewing, partly due to disinformation circulating on social media.
AFP's digital verification team in Spain has debunked many false claims linked to immigrants, mostly concerning public benefits they supposedly receive and alleged attacks by foreigners on Spanish customs.
For Alexandre Lopez Borrull, a professor in communication and information science at the Open University of Catalonia, disinformation in such cases is "the fuel and the spark at the same time".
The narrative "is fuelled over a long period of time" and when a specific event occurs, it can act as a spark in scenarios like the one that played out in Torre Pacheco, he said.
A video purporting to show the assault on the pensioner, along with a list of alleged attackers, quickly circulated online -- both debunked by AFP.
Elisa Brey, a sociology professor at Madrid's Complutense University, likened the phenomenon to criminals setting off wildfires.
"It's hot, there's a temperature alert, and an arsonist passes by and throws a match. That is what happens with disinformation," she said.
Aim to destabilise
Experts also emphasised the role of politicians, particularly the far-right Vox party, in fanning the flames of anti-migrant rhetoric.
Vox has long connected immigration to crime and recently proposed, echoing other EU political parties and far-right activists, that some migrants be deported as part of a broad "remigration" plan.
Foreigners make up 14 percent of Spain's population, up from only 1.6 percent in 1998.
In events like the violent protests in Torre Pacheco, malicious discourse seeps through different layers of social media before erupting into the public sphere, Brey explained.
First, it simmers at an "underlying" level on less visible platforms like Telegram, before jumping to more popular networks such as X and TikTok. Politicians then amplify the message through public statements, she said.
Vox's leader in the southeastern Murcia region, which includes Torre Pacheco, blamed the unrest on "illegal immigration", claiming that migrants had assaulted the elderly and committed sexual violence against women.
Prosecutors have opened an investigation into his comments to determine if they constitute a hate crime.
Social media was used in a way that, "in the end, it led to these events", added Marcelino Madrigal, an expert in online platforms and cybersecurity.
Madrigal also detected that parties were shifting their position on immigration with an eye on political gain at a time of speculation about early elections in Spain.
"With disinformation about immigration, the aim is to destabilise a government or a country as well as present yourself as an alternative to save us from a problem that does not exist," he said.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Nayib Bukele, El Salvador's unapologetic 'dictator'
Nayib Bukele, El Salvador's unapologetic 'dictator'

France 24

timea few seconds ago

  • France 24

Nayib Bukele, El Salvador's unapologetic 'dictator'

Critics fear Thursday's parliamentary vote to abolish presidential term limits clears the path for the 44-year-old's final embrace of authoritarianism. But despite mounting concerns, he remains wildly popular at home and abroad for his war on gangs, with citizens of many crime and violence-plagued countries clamoring for a Bukele of their own. His crackdown has seen nearly 90,000 presumed gangsters sent to a prison he had specially built under a state of emergency that has now been in place for over three years. It is a move credited with plummeting homicide rates but also criticized for indiscriminate arrests -- including of minors -- inhumane prison conditions, torture and deaths in custody, according to rights groups. For Bukele, a small price to pay. "We... changed the murder capital of the world, the world's most dangerous country, into the safest country in the Western Hemisphere," he crowed as he was reelected with a crushing 85 percent majority in February 2024. Trump's administration paid Bukele $6 million to keep 252 Venezuelans, accused without evidence of gang ties, in his notorious CECOT "Terrorism Confinement Center." The men were repatriated to Venezuela recently after four months behind bars with horrific tales of torture, even sexual abuse. 'Philosopher King ' Bukele is a social media whiz with a sharp beard who spurns convention and often ditches formal wear and the presidential sash in favor of jeans and a baseball cap. He has 7.6 million followers on X, which he uses prodigiously to communicate directly -- often in English -- with his fans at home and further afield. "He fosters a cult of personality; there's devotion to him," analyst Michael Shifter of the Inter-American Dialogue think tank in Washington told AFP last year. "His charisma and his communication skills are without peer in Latin America." Bukele is also a cryptocurrency enthusiast, and in 2021 made El Salvador the first country to accept bitcoin as legal tender despite repeated warnings from the International Monetary Fund. Bukele often turns to irony in the face of criticism, and has self-identified on X as "dictator of El Salvador" and "world's coolest dictator" in an ironic nod to detractors. Today he goes by "Philosopher King." Average student Of Palestinian heritage, Bukele is a son of San Salvador, the capital, where he was born in 1981. "An average student," a former high school teacher told AFP, though already a joker, he signing off as "class terrorist" in a yearbook. He studied law at the Central American University but did not graduate, and joined his father's business empire of textiles, pharmaceuticals and publicity at the age of 18. Bukele started his political career in his early 30s, serving as mayor of a San Salvador suburb, and then of the capital itself. In 2019 he graduated to the presidency -- upending an unpopular, corruption-riddled two-party system in power since El Salvador's civil war ended nearly three decades earlier. Ruthless From the start, Bukele showed himself to be nothing if not ruthless. Shortly after taking office, he ordered heavily armed police and soldiers to storm a then opposition-led parliament to intimidate MPs into approving a loan to finance an anti-crime plan. Bukele's allies subsequently won a majority in the Legislative Assembly which promptly replaced senior judges and the attorney general -- two institutions with which the president had clashed. The newly Bukele-aligned Supreme Court allowed him to seek reelection in 2024 despite a constitutional single-term limit which has now been definitively scrapped. He launched his crackdown on crime in March 2022. When gangs then in control of vast swaths of the country threatened to kill people at random in a response to his state of emergency, Bukele simply threatened to deprive jailed gangsters of food. In recent months, dozens of activists and journalists have gone into exile as Bukele has stepped up arrests of critics. "You know what? I couldn't care less if they call me a dictator," the president said in a speech in June. Bukele is married to Gabriela Rodriguez, a psychologist and ballet dancer with whom he has two children. He maintains a small trusted circle that includes his brothers Karim, Yusef and Ibrajim, and his government includes several former schoolmates.

French prosecutors seek trial for PSG's Achraf Hakimi over rape charge
French prosecutors seek trial for PSG's Achraf Hakimi over rape charge

LeMonde

timean hour ago

  • LeMonde

French prosecutors seek trial for PSG's Achraf Hakimi over rape charge

French prosecutors on Friday, August 1, called for Paris Saint-Germain star Achraf Hakimi to face trial for the alleged rape of a woman in 2023, which the Moroccan international denies. The Nanterre prosecutor's office told Agence France-Presse (AFP) that they had requested that the investigating judge refer the rape charge to a criminal court. "It is now up to the investigating magistrate to make a decision within the framework of his order," the prosecutor's office told AFP in a statement. Hakimi, 26, played a major role in PSG's run to their first Champions League title, the full-back scoring the opener in the 5-0 rout of Inter Milan in the final in May. Hakimi, who helped Morocco to their historic run to the semi-finals of the 2022 World Cup, was charged in March 2023 with raping a 24-year-old woman. Hakimi allegedly paid for his accuser to travel to his home on February 25, 2023, in the Paris suburb of Boulogne-Billancourt while his wife and children were away on holiday. On the night in question she said she had traveled to his house in d by police. Although the woman refused to make a formal accusation, prosecutors decided to press charges against the player. She told police at the time that she had met Hakimi in January 2023 on Instagram. Contacted by AFP after Friday's development, Hakimi's lawyer Fanny Colin described the night in question she said she had travelled to his house in a taxi paid for by Hakimi. She told police Hakimi had started kissing her and making non consensual sexual advances, before raping her, a police source told AFP at the time. She said she managed to break free to text a friend who came to pick her up. Contacted by AFP after Friday's development Hakimi's lawyer Fanny Colin described the call by prosecutors for a trial as "incomprehensible and senseless in light of the case's elements". "If these requisitions were to be followed, we would obviously pursue all avenues of appeal," she added. "My client welcomes this news with immense relief," Rachel-Flore Pardo, the lawyer representing the woman, told AFP.

France says it cannot save contraceptives US plans to destroy
France says it cannot save contraceptives US plans to destroy

LeMonde

time4 hours ago

  • LeMonde

France says it cannot save contraceptives US plans to destroy

France said Friday, August 1, it could not seize women's contraception products estimated to be worth $9.7 million that the United States plans to destroy, after media reported the stockpile would be incinerated in the country. The contraceptives – intended for some of the world's poorest countries, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa – were purchased by the US foreign aid agency USAID under former president Joe Biden. But France's health ministry told Agence France-Presse Friday there was no legal way for it to intervene. The administration of Biden's successor Donald Trump, which has slashed USAID and pursued anti-abortion policies, confirmed last month it planned to destroy the contraceptives, which have been stored in a warehouse in the Belgian city of Geel. According to several media reports, the unexpired products were to be incinerated in France at the end of July by a company that specialises in destroying medical waste. France's government has come under pressure to save the contraceptives, with women's rights groups calling the US decision "insane." The health ministry told AFP that the government had "examined the courses of action available to us, but unfortunately there is no legal basis for intervention by a European health authority, let alone the French national drug safety authority, to recover these medical products. Since contraceptives are not drugs of major therapeutic interest, and in this case we are not facing a supply shortage, we have no means to requisition the stocks." The ministry also said it had no information on where the contraceptives would be destroyed. Leaving Belgian warehouse Sarah Durocher, head of the French women's rights group Family Planning, told AFP that some contraceptives had already left the Belgian warehouse. "We were informed 36 hours ago that the removal of these boxes of contraceptives had begun," Durocher said Thursday. "We do not know where these trucks are now – or whether they have arrived in France," she added. "We call on all incineration companies not to destroy the contraceptives and to oppose this insane decision." French company Veolia confirmed to AFP that it had a contract with the US firm Chemonics, USAID's logistics provider. But Veolia emphasized that the contract concerned "only the management of expired products, which is not the case for the stockpile" in Belgium. The products, mostly long-acting contraceptives such as IUDs and birth control implants, are reportedly up to five years away from expiring. Outrage over decision The US decision has provoked an outcry in France, where rights groups and left-wing politicians have called on their government to stop the plan. "France cannot allow itself to become the stage for such actions. A moratorium is necessary," wrote five NGOs in an op-ed in Le Monde, condemning the "absurdity" of the US decision. Among them was MSI Reproductive Choices, one of several organisations that have offered to purchase and repackage the contraceptives at no cost to the US government. All offers have been rejected. Last week, New Hampshire's Democratic Senator Jeanne Shaheen pointed to the Trump administration's stated goal of reducing government waste, saying the contraceptives plan "is the epitome of waste, fraud and abuse." A US State Department spokesperson told AFP earlier this week that the destruction of the products would cost $167,000 and "no HIV medications or condoms are being destroyed." The spokesperson pointed to a policy that prohibits providing aid to non-governmental organisations that perform or promote abortions. The Mexico City Policy, which critics call the "global gag rule," was first introduced by President Ronald Reagan in 1984. It has been reinstated under every Republican president since. Last month, the US also incinerated nearly 500 metric tons of high-nutrition biscuits that had been meant to keep malnourished children in Afghanistan and Pakistan alive.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store