
Video shows Kenya protests, not mass runaways from Cambodia's internet sweatshops
The 45-second video showed a group of people running on a highway.
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Screenshot of the false Red Note post captured on July 28, 2025, with a red X added by AFP
It surfaced after Cambodian authorities said 2,000 people were arrested in raids, including at least 226 Chinese nationals, after Prime Minister Hun Manet
Workers at the centres typically use romance or business cons to defraud web users of an estimated $40 billion annually, but many say they were trafficked or lured there under false pretences.
The false claim also spread elsewhere on Bilibili.
"They are all victims," one user wrote.
Another commented, "The cyber-fraud is finally over."
A reverse image search on Google showed a clip showing the same scene was uploaded on TikTok on June 26 with hashtags that read "maandamano" -- or "protest" in Swahili -- and the date June 25 (archived link).
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Screenshot comparison of the false post (left) and the TikTok clip (right)
The clip was shared after protesters held ral
imagery also showed the clip was filmed along Thika Road in the Kenyan capital, Nairobi (archived link).
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Screenshot comparison of the Google Map Street View (left) and the TikTok video with matching features highlighted by AFP (right)
in their reporting, including Citizen TV Kenya (archived here).
The Daily Nation published photos where the four-lane highway can be seen several times (archived link).
AFP has debunked another false claim about scam centres in Cambodia here.

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LeMonde
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France 24
4 hours ago
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LeMonde
4 hours ago
- LeMonde
At least five reportedly dead after New York City shooting in Midtown
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