Video shows PTI march in Italy, not demonstration in UK over Pakistan army chief's visit
The video, showing a crowd of people bearing PTI flags marching along a road, was posted on X on February 20, 2025.
"Pakistanis protest Asim Munir's visit to London. There is a lot of anger among Pakistanis around the world over the ongoing human rights violations in Pakistan," reads the Urdu-language caption of the video, which was viewed more than 131,000 times.
General Syed Asim Munir is Pakistan's military chief, a position long considered the real power in the nuclear-armed Islamic nation of 250 million people.
The video circulated as Munir wrapped up a visit to the United Kingdom, where he attended the 7th Regional Stabilisation Conference at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst (archived link).
The video was also shared as jailed former prime minister Imran Khan's popularity continues to undermine the shaky coalition government that kept his PTI party from power in elections in February 2024 (archived link).
Khan, who was ousted as prime minister in 2022 and has been jailed since August 2023, was barred from standing in the polls and his PTI party was hamstrung by a widespread crackdown.
Nonetheless, candidates loyal to Khan won more seats than any other party but a coalition led by two former rival parties considered allies of the military shut them out of power (archived link).
The video was also shared in similar posts claiming it showed a protest in London on Facebook here, here and here.
While PTI supporters in London staged a protest during Munir's visit, the clip circulating online shows a different demonstration held in Italy months earlier (archived here and here).
Reverse image and keyword searches led to the same footage posted on Facebook by PTI's Punjab chapter on November 25, 2024 (archived link).
Its description reads: "A Huge protest was demonstrated by PTI Italy in Brescia, Pakistan's (sic) from all over Italy joined and showed support for Imran Khan and voiced against worst human rights abuses in Pakistan."
At the time, convoys of Khan supporters marched on Islamabad to join protests over his incarceration after a day of deadly confrontations between marchers and security forces (archived link).
Overseas Pakistanis also responded to the call for protests in dozens of countries, including Italy, according to the PTI (archived link).
The falsely shared footage matches Google Street View imagery from Brescia's Via Cefalonia (archived link).
Pakistani fact-checking organisation Soch Fact Check also debunked the false claim (archived link).
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
32 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Israeli warplanes launch strikes on Hezbollah stronghold near Beirut
Israeli warplanes started late Thursday their strikes on areas it has threatened to hit in Beirut's southern suburbs, a Hezbollah stronghold, eyewitnesses said. Roaring warplanes could be heard all over the capital Beirut and the sound of heavy blasts echoed throughout the targeted areas. Plumes of black smoke were seen near the al Qaem Mosque inside Beirut's southern suburbs. The strikes came after the Israeli army issued an evacuation warning for parts of Beirut's southern suburbs, calling on residents to leave the vicinity of buildings associated with Hezbollah. "You are located near facilities belonging to the terrorist organization Hezbollah," said the warning from Arabic-language spokesman Avichay Adraee, whose warnings usually come before the airstrikes. Earlier, the Israeli army said in a statement that it will soon carry out a strike "on underground UAV production infrastructure sites that were deliberately established in the heart of civilian population in the Dahieh in Beirut in southern Lebanon." "Despite the understandings between Israel and Lebanon, the IDF has identified that the Hezbollah aerial unit is operating to produce thousands of UAV's, with the direction and funding of Iranian terrorists," the army said. It added that these activities constitute a blatant violation of the understandings between Israel and Lebanon which was reached in November 2024. The Lebanese army attempted to deter the Israeli army from carrying out its threats by trying to inspect the threatened areas, but the Israeli army refused, so the Lebanese army moved away from the sites that were later bombed, military sources told dpa.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Altered Lindsey Graham photo circulates as senator pushes Russia sanctions
"Declassified: Photo of Lindsay Graham with Osama Bin Laden and John McCain," says text over the picture, which spells Graham's first name wrong and was shared by a right-wing influencer who goes by "Gunther Eagleman" in a June 4, 2025 post on X. "Make sense yet?" Eagleman asked his 1.4 million followers in his post, which has since been deleted. Similar posts quickly spread across Facebook in the days after Republican Graham and Democratic Senator Richard Blumenthal -- who have been leading a push in Congress for tough new US sanctions on Russia -- traveled to Ukraine to meet with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky. The diplomatic effort sparked calls from former White House chief strategist Steve Bannon for Donald Trump to condemn and arrest Graham, who is also a longtime ally of the president. But the image of Graham and McCain -- a military veteran who died in 2018 and whom Trump frequently derided -- is doctored. The two men were not standing with bin Laden. A reverse image search surfaced the original photo, which captured the two lawmakers beside the then-Afghan leader Karzai, on McCain's X account (archived here). "Senator @GrahamBlog and I met with President Karzai yesterday as well #Afghanistan," McCain wrote. The post is dated July 4, 2013 -- years after bin Laden died in a US raid on his home in Pakistan in 2011. AFP has debunked other misinformation about US politics here.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
UMass Amherst designated ‘hostile campus' by Council on American Islamic Relations
AMHERST — The Council on American-Islamic Relations and its Massachusetts chapter has named the University of Massachusetts Amherst a 'hostile campus,' after its response to pro-Palestinian protests last spring and the year before. In a statement from the council on Tuesday, the group said UMass Amherst made discriminatory sanctions against students during their protests of the war in Gaza and demonstrated a 'pattern of neglect in addressing anti-Arab and anti-Palestinian harassment.' The council is the nation's largest Muslim civil rights and advocacy organization. In its response, the university said in an email on Thursday that the council's claims are 'riddled with significant inaccuracies.' A spokesperson for the Islamic council did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Twenty-two universities were deemed hostile if they created a 'dangerous environment for anti-genocide students,' the council said in its statement. Harvard University in Cambridge is the only other Massachusetts school to get the hostile designation this year. Students, faculty and staff were encouraged to file a 'Report a Hostile Campus' form if they wanted the council to look into complaints reported about a university. Some of the claims against the university stem from an October 2023 protest when 57 demonstrators were arrested for protesting the war in Gaza and the university's investments in Raytheon, a weapons manufacturer. Last April and early May, students continued to protest the war, one of a number of protests around the country. A May 7 protest at UMass Amherst led to the arrests of 130 students and faculty. Participants, including community members, shortly thereafter called for the resignation of Javier Reyes, the university's then-newly minted chancellor, after he invited police to dismantle and disperse the demonstrations. In February, it was revealed that Reyes was interviewing for work elsewhere, with less than two years on the job in Amherst. Throughout the summer and into the fall, students faced academic and legal repercussions for participating in the protests. At the end of the summer, Reyes' Campus Demonstration Policy Task Force released a report on the university's updated policies and practices around student protests. The task force was made up of students, faculty and university leadership. Then in January, an independent review of the university's response to the May 7 protest and arrests found that campus administration 'acted reasonably,' but could have done more to protect its relationship with students. The Islamic council recently said in a civil rights report on unconstitutional crackdowns that Islamophobia 'continues to be at an all-time high across the country,' and 'viewpoint discrimination against those speaking out against genocide and apartheid was a key factor in many cases.' Last April, the U.S. Department of Education's Office of Civil Rights also began investigating the university after a 49-page complaint filed by Palestine Legal, alleging that the university had not been responsive to student reports about anti-Palestinian and anti-Arab discrimination on campus. UMass said in its statement on Thursday that the federal Office of Civil Rights is still investigating the complaint. The Department of Education's press office has not yet responded to a query from The Republican on the state of the inquiry. In its emailed response to the 'Hostile Campus' designation, UMass said many of the Islamic council's claims are 'false,' according to Emily Gest, associate vice chancellor for news and media relations at the university. For example, she said the organization's claims that UMass Amherst created a ban on 'tents, face coverings and essential protest materials' improperly linked users to an article about UMass Boston, a sister school. 'UMass Amherst has no such policies and is an entirely separate campus,' the statement said. Gest clarified that, at UMass Amherst, there is a review process for erecting any structures, including tents. Another erroneous claim made by the organization was that police used Tasers and pepper spray on the protesters, Gest said. The university said, 'No Tasers, pepper spray or any other crowd-dispersal tools were used in any demonstration response." The university also said it did not 'criminalize peaceful demonstrations.' "As the university has stated on multiple occasions over the past year, 'Nobody's right to free speech or right to peacefully assemble was infringed upon. The university's decision to engage law enforcement was based entirely on safety.' The fortified encampments, constructed of 2,000 pounds of wood and fencing installed by demonstrators, were not protected speech," the statement said. A final claim by the Islamic organization said three students were 'banned from studying abroad, leaving them scrambling for housing and alternative academic options' also was partially informed. The International Programs Office revoked eligibility for some students to study abroad for the upcoming winter/spring terms because of the disciplinary actions against them, but those were all dealt with prior to the study abroad period. 'No student received a study abroad ban and (were) fully eligible to apply for study abroad once any disciplinary sanctions were resolved,' the university said. Lawmakers decry FirstLight dam's 300-gallon oil spill into Conn. River Island Spice food truck catches fire, rendered unusable, owner says Religion Notes: June 5, 2025 Springfield first in the state to propose regulations banning 'gas station weed' Read the original article on MassLive.