logo
Old Pakistan mosque fire misrepresented as 'India strike'

Old Pakistan mosque fire misrepresented as 'India strike'

AFP20-05-2025

"Drone attack on Faisal Mosque Islamabad," reads the Urdu-language caption of a video posted on X on May 8, 2025.
The video, showing a fire on the side of the road on the way to the mosque in the capital, was shared as India and Pakistan clashed in the worst violence between the countries in decades (archived here and here).
Drone, missile, fighter jet and artillery attacks across the nuclear-armed neighbours' contested frontier claimed the lives of at least 70 people on both sides before a ceasefire was agreed (archived link).
The fighting erupted two weeks after an attack on tourists in Indian-administered Kashmir on April 22 that killed 26 people and which India accused Pakistan of backing.
Pakistan firmly denied any involvement and called for an independent investigation.
Image
Screenshot of the false X post, captured on May 16, 2025
The same clip was shared alongside similar claims elsewhere on Facebook and TikTok.
While Pakistani military sources said its forces had shot down 77 drones with debris of many incursions seen by AFP in cities across the country, the footage circulating online predates the latest conflict (archived link).
A reverse image search on Google using keyframes from the falsely shared video led to embedded in local news reports from the Pakistan Observer and Daily Ausaf about a fire near the mosque on May 28, 2024 (archived here and here).
The footage used in the news reports show the same vehicle parked near to a roadside fire on the approach to the Faisal Mosque.
According to the Daily Ausaf report, the fire broke out as Islamabad and much of the country sizzled through a heatwave.
Image
Screenshot comparison of the falsely shared video (left) and the clip posted by Daily Ausaf in May 2024 (right)
An AFP reporter who visited the mosque on May 8 after false posts circulated found no evidence of any drone attack or fire nearby.
The deputy commissioner of Islamabad also posted on X and on their verified Facebook page that local authorities rushed to the mosque immediately after reports of a drone attack spread on social media, but "the rumor proved false" (archived here and here).
"Citizens are requested not to pay attention to rumours regarding such matter."
The conflict between India and Pakistan has spurred a wave of misinformation, which AFP has debunked here.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Canada steelworkers urge Ottawa to counter Trump
Canada steelworkers urge Ottawa to counter Trump

France 24

timean hour ago

  • France 24

Canada steelworkers urge Ottawa to counter Trump

Hamilton is known locally as "Steeltown," with expansive industrial plants dominating the view from the main bridge that leads into the city. Hamilton has endured countless setbacks as the steel industry that drove its growth through much of 20th Century declined. Trump's decision to double steel and aluminum tariffs to a crippling 50 percent did not come as a shock to those who have spent decades in the industry. "Steel is like a roller-coaster," said Jake Lombardo, who retired after 38 years at Stelco, one of Hamilton's main plants. Lombardo's career spanned the era that saw automation and cheaper foreign product hollow out Hamilton's steel sector. He voiced a degree of understanding for Trump's efforts to shield US producers from external competition. "I'm not a Trump supporter, but one thing I like (about) what he said, he wants to do things in-house. And I don't think there's anything wrong with that," Lombardo, 69, told AFP. "We should have been doing this a long time ago." Hamilton's steel industry was born in the early part of the last century, hitting its peak in the decades following World War II, when the main local union, United Steelworkers Local 1005, counted more than 12,000 members. That number has since fallen to about 650, said union president Ron Wells. Wells said he wasn't opposed to a future where Canadian producers serve Canadian demand and cross-border trade is reduced. But, like Lombardo, he believes Ottawa needs to create the environment that ensures that Canadian steelmakers thrive. "We've been saying that for, like years, if not decades," Wells told AFP. 'Better late than never'? The union chief said he was encouraged by Prime Minister Mark Carney's pledge to counter Trump's trade war by boosting internal trade and ushering in an era of massive construction across Canada. Asked about the prospect that Hamilton could benefit from Carney's recent promise that his government would "build baby build," Wells said: "we applaud it." "It's better late than never." Carney on Wednesday called Trump's decision to double steel and aluminum tariffs "unjustified" and "illegal" and promised that Canada -- the largest supplier of foreign steel and aluminum to the United States -- will respond. But in the short term, Wells said there is cause for concern. Stelco, which was bought by the US steel producer Cleveland-Cliffs last year, had been sending about 30 percent of its output to the United States, Wells said. Those orders largely dried up when Trump imposed a blanket 25 percent tariff on all metal imports in March. But Stelco was still selling to Canadian clients who were making products subsequently sold to the United States, with the American importers absorbing the 25 percent tariff hit. 'The wrong foe' At 50 percent, Wells voiced fear that business could vanish. "People are just pissed off that (Trump) keeps changing his mind and he's playing chicken with the economy," Wells told AFP. "Our members want to see the tariffs situation get resolved. So go back to full production and we can share the wealth." The Canadian Steel Producers Association, an industry group, said Wednesday that "at a 25 per cent tariff rate, we saw significant layoffs, curtailed investments and a significant drop of shipments to the United States." "At a 50 per cent tariff rate, the US market is effectively closed to Canadian steel, leaving billions of dollars of Canadian steel without a market," it warned. Throughout Trump's trade war, Canadian workers in targeted sectors -- notably auto and metal -- have voiced frustration over the president's decision to harm a bilateral trade relationship widely seen as mutually beneficial. "We think they're picking on the wrong foe," Wells said. "Is he trying to get a new trade agreement?" He asked.

Brazil's top court tackles social media regulation
Brazil's top court tackles social media regulation

France 24

timean hour ago

  • France 24

Brazil's top court tackles social media regulation

After a months-long pause, the court resumed its interrogation of four cases that focus on the accountability of online platforms for illegal content posted by users. Alexandre de Moraes, one of 11 judges of the court, has repeatedly clashed with X owner Elon Musk and various right-wing personalities over social media posts. The review is taking place in parallel with the coup trial of far-right former president Jair Bolsonaro, whose followers prosecutors accuse of using social media to lie about the reliability of the electoral system and plot the downfall of successor Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva. Brazil's highest court is seeking to determine to what extent companies such as X, TikTok, Instagram and Facebook are responsible for removing illegal content, and how they can be sanctioned if they do not. Though it is a review of four lower court cases, the judges' ruling will create a precedent that will affect the country's tens of millions of social media users. At issue is a clause in the country's so-called Civil Framework for the Internet, a law in effect since 2014, that says platforms are only responsible for harm caused by a post if they ignore a judge's order to remove it. Three of the Supreme Court's 11 judges have already ruled in favor of higher accountability. The other eight have yet to vote. The court has already taken a strong stance on regulating social media. Last year, Moraes blocked X for 40 days for failing to comply with a series of court orders against online disinformation. He had previously ordered X to suspend the accounts of several Bolsonaro supporters. Musk and other critics say Moraes is stifling free speech, and US President Donald Trump's administration is weighing sanctions against the judge, who Bolsonaro accuses of judicial "persecution." Lula, who emerged the victor in a tightly-fought election against Bolsonaro in 2022, is advocating for "accelerating regulation" of online platforms. "It is not possible for someone to attempt a coup d'etat... and say that this is freedom of expression," the president told reporters on Tuesday.

Cuban students call boycott over mobile tariff hikes
Cuban students call boycott over mobile tariff hikes

France 24

time2 hours ago

  • France 24

Cuban students call boycott over mobile tariff hikes

Cubans say the tariff hikes implemented by state telecoms company Etecsa on May 30 will leave them with only a few gigabytes of data per month as purchasing additional data will be prohibitively expensive. Students have been particularly angered by the new pricing system, under which top-ups must be paid in hard-to-come-by-dollars or at a steep increment in Cuban pesos. While acknowledging "progress" in negotiations with Etecsa, student union president Jose Almedia told AFP: "We want more." On Tuesday evening, student leaders at the University of Havana's mathematics and informatics faculty called for a boycott of classes in order to try to force Etecsa to annul the tariff hikes. Fellow leaders of the union chapter in the philosophy, history and sociology faculty backed the boycott, as did some students from the arts department. It was not immediately clear how many students heeded the call for the protest. But an arts student who attended classes on Wednesday told AFP there were "practically no students" in the faculty. Eye-watering top-up costs Etecsa gave no forewarning of its new pricing structure, which it said was necessary to fund investment in infrastructure. Rafael Gomez, an 18-year-old student at the University of Havana, said the new tariffs left mobile users with the bare minimum in terms of data. "We were used to a certain system," where customers can top up their credit as often as they like, he told AFP. Now, they are limited to 6GB of data, which Gomez noted "is nothing and if you want to buy more, it costs over 3,000 pesos ($25), which you cannot afford on a regular Cuban salary," Gomez said. The average monthly salary on the communist island is 5,700 pesos, or $47. Faced with the outcry from students, President Miguel Diaz-Canel said Sunday that the government was looking at "options" for "the most vulnerable sectors, including our dear students." After talks with student bodies Etecsa on Monday announced that students would be allowed two monthly top-ups at 360 pesos ($3), compared with one for the rest of the population. Further top-ups have to be paid in dollars or at the eye-watering price of over 3,000 pesos. The concessions failed to assuage the anger of many students. Brian Gamez, a history student, told AFP he favored "peaceful protests" but was afraid that a mobilization could lead to vandalism. The Cuban government has been wary of stoking popular discontent since July 2021 when thousands of people took to the streets in a rare show of defiance to demonstrate over shortages of fuel, food, medicine and electricity.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store