logo
Video shows detention of Bangladeshi paramilitary force members, not Myanmar rebels

Video shows detention of Bangladeshi paramilitary force members, not Myanmar rebels

AFP6 days ago
"Recently Bangladesh Army claimed that they arrested 15 AA Arakan Army members," reads the caption of a Facebook video shared on July 15, 2025.
The video, viewed more than 24,000 times, shows a group of men in military uniform sitting on the floor with their hands raised above their heads. The group are surrounded by armed soldiers and bystanders.
The Arakan Army are an ethnic minority rebel group battling Myanmar's ruling junta in western Rakhine state (archived link). They claimed complete control of a key region along the Bangladesh border in December 2024 (archived link).
The region has emerged as a key front in Myanmar's highly fractured civil war, pitching a myriad of ethnic minority rebels and pro-democracy fighters against the junta that seized power in a 2021 coup (archived link).
More than 3.5 million people are internally displaced across Myanmar, according to United Nations data, more than 500,000 in Rakhine state alone.
Image
Screenshot of the false Facebook post captured on July 24, 2025, with a red X added by AFP
The same clip was also shared in similar Facebook and X posts.
But the video does not show the arrest of Arakan Army members.
Ansar protest
A combination of reverse image searches using keyframes from the falsely shared video and keyword searches on Google led to the same footage posted on Instagram on August 26, 2024 (archived link).
In the Instagram video, someone can be heard saying in Bengali: "Hey brother, bring the rope. Tie them all up."
Further keyword searches found the clip was also published on the same day by local news outlet Radio Padma News about the Bangladeshi army arresting members of the paramilitary Ansar forces (archived link).
A similar video taken from a different angle was published by RTV Bangladesh (archived link).
According to the Dhaka Tribune, Ansar Bahini -- also known as the Bangladesh Ansar and Village Defence Force -- is a paramilitary auxiliary force administered by the country's home affairs ministry (archived link).
The force, which comprises approximately six million members, is responsible for the preservation of internal security and law enforcement in Bangladesh.
Image
Screenshot comparison of the falsely shared video (left) and the clip posted by Radio Padma News (right)
According to The Daily Star, Ansar members had been demanding the abolition of the force's "rest tradition" where members are sent for six-months of unpaid leave after working for three consecutive years (archived link).
The report said there were clashes between students and Ansar members who blocked a key government building despite assurances about abolishing compulsory unpaid leave from Bangladesh's interim government.
A closer analysis of the falsely shared video also shows the individuals sitting on the floor are wearing uniform that corresponds to that worn by Ansar members, as shown in photos from the Ansar protest in August 2024 available on the Getty Images website (archived link).
Image
Screenshot comparisons of the Radio Padma News clip (left) and the Getty Images photo (right), with similarities highlighted and magnified by AFP
AFP has previously debunked other misinformation related to the Arakan Army and the unrest in Myanmar.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Posts falsely claim to show footage of Ethiopian prime minister fleeing country after shooting
Posts falsely claim to show footage of Ethiopian prime minister fleeing country after shooting

AFP

time6 hours ago

  • AFP

Posts falsely claim to show footage of Ethiopian prime minister fleeing country after shooting

The post, published on Facebook on July 22, 2025, includes a video with text overlays in Amharic that translate to: 'Arat Kilo is in turmoil following the shooting of Abiy by one of his security guards.' Image Screenshot of the false post, taken on July 29, 2025 Arat Kilo is the location of the Ethiopian prime minister's office. The post has been shared more than 230 times. Another post shared by the same Facebook account a day later claims a 'secretly recorded video shows Abiy Ahmed fleeing the country with his wife following yesterday's protest'. Image Screenshot of the false post, taken on July 29, 2025 The post has been shared more than 140 times. The Facebook account spreading these claims is based in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, according to information in the bio. The account regularly publishes posts on political developments in the Sidama region — one of Ethiopia's 12 regional states. Despite the end of the brutal two-year war in the northern region of Tigray in November 2022, Ethiopia is still plagued by conflict, including in the Oromia and Amhara regions. Oromia, Ethiopia's most populous region, has been dominated by an insurgency involving the Oromo Liberation Army (OLA) since 2018, despite attempted peace talks that have failed (archived here). More recently, a local militia known as Fano was initially allied with the Ethiopian federal government before launching an armed rebellion in the Amhara region in April 2023 (archived here). The armed conflicts have posed major challenges for Abiy and his government. However, the videos do not show Abiy fleeing the country after being shot. Ethiopian cargo flight AFP Fact Check used the video verification tool InVID-WeVerify to conduct reverse image searches on keyframes from the video showing an aeroplane taking off at night. The results established that the video was first published on TikTok in 2021, with the caption that it shows an Ethiopian Airlines cargo Boeing 777 leaving for Liège in Belgium (archived here). An official statement issued in 2024 by Ethiopian Airlines confirms how the airports in Ethiopia and Liège have maintained a partnership for the transport of goods between Europe, Africa and the rest of the world for more than 17 years (archived here). Despite claims in the post that Abiy had fled the country following a protest in the capital on July 21, 2025, searches revealed there were no demonstrations in Addis Ababa on that day. We could not find the source of the second video, which appears to be user-generated content (UGC) -- meaning it was filmed by a bystander -- of police cars racing through a street, purportedly after Abiy was shot by a bodyguard. AFP Fact Check compared the images of the vehicles, some of them marked with the letters 'EFP' in yellow, and found they resemble the fleet used by the Ethiopian Federal Police. Image Screenshots of the false video (left) and matching image of vehicle from Ethiopian federal police official Facebook page We have reached out to the Ethiopian Federal Police for comment. The article will be updated accordingly. A keyword search confirmed that Abiy delivered a public speech at the World Food Systems event, co-hosted with Italy and held in Addis Ababa, on July 28, 2025 -- days after the posts were published (archived here). Notably, there are no credible media reports of Abiy being shot by one of his security guards, the day before he purportedly fled the country with his wife.

Posts about Gazans migrating to Sweden misuse football squad footage
Posts about Gazans migrating to Sweden misuse football squad footage

AFP

time10 hours ago

  • AFP

Posts about Gazans migrating to Sweden misuse football squad footage

" reads an X post on July 15, 2025. "Swedes should think that to whom will these young men marry? It is obvious that these people will convert Swedish Christian girls and marry them. Sweden is already struggling with Islamic riots but Still the Swedes are not coming to their senses." It shares a video showing a group of youngsters wearing shirts bearing the colours of the Palestinian flag in a plane. Image Screenshot of the false X post taken July 18, 2025, with a red X added by AFP The armed group's 2023 attack, which sparked the war, resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people, most of them civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official figures. Youth football team The Swedish Migration Agency told AFP they could not confirm whether the video shows migrants being relocated to the country, but said a person cannot apply for protection outside Sweden. "It is not possible to apply for asylum before arriving in Sweden. You must be in Sweden or at the Swedish border," an agency spokesperson said on July 29. "Then it is the Swedish Migration Agency that examines the application and either grants protection or rejects it." The video was shared with similar claims on Facebook and X, but in fact shows a West Bank team flying to Sweden for football matches. A reverse image search on Google using keyframes from the clip found Rawahel Charity -- a Palestinian sports association -- shared the clip on TikTok on July 11, 2025 (archived link). The Arabic-language caption reads, "To Sweden". Image Screenshot comparison of the false post video (L) and the TikTok video The Rawahel Charity has told AFP they were travelling only for football before going home. "We are a football team from Tulkarm in the West Bank. We were invited to participate first in a training camp in Paris, then in the world's largest children's football tournament, Gothia Cup in Sweden. We will then travel to Denmark to participate in the Dana Cup and then to Oslo to participate in the Norway Cup," a spokesperson for the group said on July 18, 2025. "We're not new to these tournaments; we were invited back after reaching the advanced stages last summer without any issues, and then we all returned to Palestine." Their trip can be seen on their social media pages and official websites of the games' organisers, including a Facebook picture posted on July 9 showing players in front of the Eiffel Tower in Paris (archived link). Mohamed Moulay, a regional councillor in Centre-Val de Loire in northern France, uploaded a picture with the team while they were in the country (archived here and here). They then travelled to Sweden for Gothia Cup, winning all their games in the group stage but were beaten in the knockout stage, according to the organiser's website (archived here and here). The squad moved on to Denmark for the Dana Cup. They advanced to the semi-finals before they were knocked out by the Minerva Academy, which posted a picture of the game with the Palestinian side (archived here and here). The team went on to compete in the Norway Cup, where the team was again beaten by the Minerva Academy in the knockout stage (archived link). The organiser also uploaded a clip showing the team's arrival in Norway (archived link). The team posted a picture on their Instagram account on August 3 showing them leaving Europe after finishing the games (archived link). AFP has previously debunked misinformation about the Israel-Gaza war here.

Edited news graphic misrepresents ruling on Philippine VP impeachment
Edited news graphic misrepresents ruling on Philippine VP impeachment

AFP

time10 hours ago

  • AFP

Edited news graphic misrepresents ruling on Philippine VP impeachment

"Du30 are (sic) innocent. It is not our duty to favor any political result. Ours is to ensure that politics are framed within the Rule of Just Law," reads text written on an apparent news graphic shared July 26, 2025 on Facebook. The post appears to attribute the remarks to Supreme Court Marvic Leonen, whose picture is included in the image. He penned the tribunal's July 25 ruling that blocked Duterte's trial, saying it violated a constitutional provision against multiple impeachment proceedings within a single year (archived link). The House of Representatives impeached Duterte in February, charging the vice president with graft, corruption and an alleged assassination plot against one-time ally and former running mate President Ferdinand Marcos. "They just can't accept that SARA DU30 is innocent, no stain of corruption," says the image's Tagalog-language caption, using a popular nickname for the vice president. Image Screenshot of the false post taken August 4, 2025, with a red X added by AFP The top court's 13-0 ruling came just days before the Senate was to begin its new session, with the vice president's political future hanging in the balance (archived link). Widely expected to run for president in 2028, a Senate trial conviction would have barred Duterte permanently from public office. The claim -- earlier debunked by Rappler -- has also spread on TikTok, YouTube and Threads (archived link). Several users appeared to have been misled. ipulated news graphic and misrepresent the Supreme Court's decision on the case. "Our ruling does not absolve petitioner Duterte from any of the charges. Any ruling on the charges against her can only be accomplished through another impeachment process, followed by a trial and conviction by the Senate," the court said in its decision published on its official website (archived link). It added a new impeachment process can only be initiated against Duterte starting February 6, 2026. A reverse image search on Google found the original graphic published on the Facebook page of local media News5 on July 25, 2025 (archived link). It does not include the quote, "Duterte are innocent". Image Screenshot comparison of the false post (L) and the original News5 graphic Duterte's impeachment trial has triggered a flurry of false posts, many of them debunked by AFP here.

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