
Fabricated screenshot fans baseless claim Philippine first lady 'detained' in US
"You can see here how they've been fooling the people but [diehard Duterte supporters] are too smart for this," reads a Facebook post on March 30.
It included two screenshots apparently taken from First Lady Liza Marcos's verified account. One shows four photos of an event taken on March 27.
The other is supposedly a collection of over 2,330 photos posted September 26, 2022 which , including the four pictures as the recent post.
"To those who are pro-Marcos, please answer me this, are you still fighting for the right thing?" the post adds.
Image
Screenshot of false post taken on April 10, 2025
Rumours that the first lady was held up by law enforcement in Los Angeles surfaced online in early March after she came back from a working visit to the United States (archived link).
The false claims spread after President Marcos's government handed over former leader Rodrigo Duterte to the International Criminal Court to face a crimes against humanity charge tied to his drug war in which thousands were killed (archived link).
The presidential palace dismissed the rumours on March 13 and there have been no official reports (archived here, here, here).
The images spread elsewhere on Facebook and were cross-posted across multiple platforms such as X, Threads, TikTok and Instagram.
Fabricated screenshot
Keyword searches found one of the screenshots corresponds to a March 29 post on Liza Marcos's verified Facebook page (archived link).
The caption read: "Cocktail reception to celebrate Women's Month with lady ambassadors & female spouses of heads of diplomatic missions in the Philippines. Kalayaan Hall, Malacañan Palace, Manila. 27 March 2025."
A corresponding video of the event was also posted on the same day (archived link).
But the other screenshot supposedly showing the older post has been fabricated.
A review of the photos and video of the event shows foreign envoys who began their assignment in the Philippines after the supposed September 26, 2022 date in the fabricated post.
Ambassadors Yuliia Fediv of Ukraine, Emma Hickey of Ireland, Saija Nurminen of Finland and Megawati Dato Paduka Haji Manan of Brunei can be seen in one of the photos (archived here, here, here and here)
Fediv was posted to the Philippines in March 2025; Hickey and Nurminen in September 2024; and Manan in March 2023.
Image
Screenshot comparison of the fabricated post (left), and the photo seen in the original post (right) taken by AFP on April 21. The original shows Philippine first lady Liza Marcos (left) Yuliia Fediv of Ukraine (second from left), Emma Hickey of Ireland (third from right), Saija Nurminen of Finland (second from right) and Megawati Dato Paduka Haji Manan of Brunei (right).
A review of the video found more ambassadors whose posting came after 2022.
These include Marie Fontanel of France and Constance See Sin Yuan of Singapore appointed in 2023; Catherine McIntosh of New Zealand posted in 2024; and Smiljana Knez of Slovenia who arrived early this year in February (archived here, here, here and here).
Six of the envoys seen in the first lady's Facebook posts also attended an event at Manila's De La Salle University on the same day of the first lady's cocktail party on March 27 (archived link).
A further review of Liza Marcos's Facebook timeline from August 2022 -- when the page was created -- to December 2022 found that social media posts with photos only included a maximum of four pictures.
There are no posts that carried thousands, contrary to what's displayed in the fabricated screenshot.
Image
Screenshot comparison of the fabricated post (left), and a post on the first lady's official Facebook page in September 2022 (right)
AFP has debunked another post that falsely claimed Liza Marcos was "detained" in the United States.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


France 24
an hour ago
- France 24
Irish university to cut links with Israel over Gaza war
The university's board informed students by email that it had accepted the recommendations of a taskforce to sever "institutional links with the State of Israel, Israeli universities and companies headquartered in Israel". The recommendations would be "enacted for the duration of the ongoing violations of international and humanitarian law", said the email sent by the board's chairman Paul Farrell, and seen by AFP. The taskforce was set up after part of the university's campus in central Dublin was blockaded by students for five days last year in protest at Israel's actions in Gaza. Among the taskforce's recommendations approved by the board were pledges to divest "from all companies headquartered in Israel" and to "enter into no future supply contracts with Israeli firms" and "no new commercial relationships with Israeli entities". The university also said that it would "enter into no further mobility agreements with Israeli universities". Trinity has two current Erasmus+ exchange agreements with Israeli universities: Bar Ilan University, an agreement that ends in July 2026, and the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, which ends in July 2025, the university told AFP in an email. The board also said that the university "should not submit for approval or agree to participate in any new institutional research agreements involving Israeli participation". It "should seek to align itself with like-minded universities and bodies in an effort to influence EU policy concerning Israel's participation in such collaborations," it added. Ireland has been among the most outspoken critics of Israel's response to the October 7, 2023 attacks on southern Israel by Hamas militants that sparked the war in Gaza. Polls since the start of the war have shown overwhelming pro-Palestinian sympathy in Ireland. In May 2024, Dublin joined several other European countries in recognising Palestine as a "sovereign and independent state". It then joined South Africa in bringing a case before the International Court of Justice in The Hague accusing Israel of committing genocide in Gaza -- charges angrily denied by Israeli leaders. In December, Israel's Foreign Minister Gideon Saar ordered the closure of the country's embassy in Dublin, blaming Ireland's "extreme anti-Israel policies". The University of Geneva also announced Wednesday that it has ended its partnership with the Hebrew University of Jerusalem following student protests, saying it no longer reflected the institution's "strategic priorities".


Euronews
3 hours ago
- Euronews
Murder of Tunisian man sparks France's first far-right terrorism probe
Shock over the murder of a Tunisian hairdresser in a village near the French Riviera last weekend continues to reverberate throughout the Western European country, as authorities condemn the crime as fuelled by hatred. After the 46-year-old Hichem Miraoui was shot dead near his home in Puget-sur-Argens in southern France on Saturday, one of his neighbours has claimed responsibility for the attack, in which a man of Turkish background was also injured. In videos posted on Facebook shortly before his arrest, the suspect, identified as Christophe B, 53, used racist language and appeared to incite French citizens to conduct further acts of violence against Muslims. French Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau said on Tuesday that the murder was 'clearly a racist crime', 'probably also anti-Muslim' and 'perhaps also a terrorist crime'. The national anti-terrorism prosecutor's office (PNAT), which opened in 2019, launched a probe into the killing this week, the first time it has done so for a murder that is thought to have been inspired by far-right ideology. Since Miraoui's murder, Muslim communities across France have spoken of their sadness and fear. In a statement released on Tuesday, the Rhône Council of Mosques said the crime was indicative of the 'troubling and increasingly hostile climate toward citizens of Muslim faith in France'. Meanwhile, Hafiz Chems-Eddine, Rector of the Grand Mosque of Paris, called for 'urgent, national awareness of the dangers of xenophobic, racist, and Islamphobic rhetoric'. 'It is time to question the promoters of this hatred, who, in the political and media spheres, operate with impunity and lead to extremely serious incidents,' he said. Islamic leaders also made a connection between Miraoui's murder and the fatal stabbing of the 22-year-old Malian Aboubakar Cissé in a mosque in southern France on 25 April. In a video filmed while Cissé was dying, his French attacker criticised Islam.


Mediapart
5 hours ago
- Mediapart
Porn websites close access in France in protest at age check law
The cookies and similar technologies we use on Mediapart are of different natures and allow us to pursue different purposes. Some are necessary for the functioning of the site and the mobile application (you cannot refuse them). Others are optional but help to facilitate your experience as a reader and in some way support Mediapart. You can refuse or accept them below, depending on their purpose. Do you agree that Mediapart uses cookies or similar technologies for the following purposes ? You can make your choice, for each category, by enabling or disabling the switch button. Mandatory for the operation of the site or application Subscriber login, anonymized audience measurement, sending of push notifications, tracking of failures, highlighting of our services these tools are necessary to track the activity of our services and their proper functioning. read more Here are the various cookies and similar technologies included in this category : Authentication cookies : subscriber login. : subscriber login. AT Internet : anonymized audience measurement : anonymized audience measurement Display of multimedia editorial content : videos (YouTube, Dailymotion, Vimeo, INA), social networks (Facebook, Instagram, Pinterest, Twitter), documents (Scribd, Document Cloud, Slideshare), sounds (SoundCloud, Spotify, Deezer), maps (Google Maps, Mapbox, CartoDB, uMap), infographics (Highcharts, GitHub, Datawrapper, Flourish, Infogram, ThingLink, jQuery, Google Fonts, Bootstrap), live blogs (24liveblog, CoverItLive), media integration support in Journal and Club publications (Embedly). : videos (YouTube, Dailymotion, Vimeo, INA), social networks (Facebook, Instagram, Pinterest, Twitter), documents (Scribd, Document Cloud, Slideshare), sounds (SoundCloud, Spotify, Deezer), maps (Google Maps, Mapbox, CartoDB, uMap), infographics (Highcharts, GitHub, Datawrapper, Flourish, Infogram, ThingLink, jQuery, Google Fonts, Bootstrap), live blogs (24liveblog, CoverItLive), media integration support in Journal and Club publications (Embedly). Typeform : optional questionnaires to collect readers opinions on our digital products. : optional questionnaires to collect readers opinions on our digital products. Datadog (only on the website) : technical indicators and load balancing. : technical indicators and load balancing. Selligent (only on the website) : communication with the subscriber, highlighting of services, offers and benefits. : communication with the subscriber, highlighting of services, offers and benefits. Batch (only on the app) : sending push notifications and in-app messages. : sending push notifications and in-app messages. Firebase Cloud Messaging (only on app) : required for push notifications to work on Android. : required for push notifications to work on Android. Microsoft App Center (only on app) : app update and failure tracking system. Statistics These tools allow us to collect statistics on site and mobile application traffic to understand usage, detect possible problems and optimize the ergonomics of our products. read more These are the third-party tools included in this category : AT Internet : audience measurement related to subscriber ID. : audience measurement related to subscriber ID. CrazyEggs (only on website) : customer journey analysis. : customer journey analysis. Nonli (only on website) : helps our social network team to publish our contents on social networks. : helps our social network team to publish our contents on social networks. Qiota (available only on the website) : management of the datawall system. Advertising retargeting There is no advertising on Mediapart. But we do promote our content and services on other sites and social networks. For this, we use technologies made available by some advertising companies. read more These are the third-party tools included in this category : Facebook (only on the website) : audience targeting on social networks to promote Mediapart. Content Access Management We use the Qiota service from Opper Marketing Suite to configure the activation of a datawall on certain content (available only on the website). This system, intended for non-subscribed users, requires the input of an email address to access the relevant content. By providing this information, the user consents to its collection, storage, and use for statistical purposes. In accordance with the applicable regulations, users have the right to access, rectify, and delete their data, which they can exercise by contacting dpo@ Save and close