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Edited video of Philippine rebel leader falsely linked to Duterte arrest
Edited video of Philippine rebel leader falsely linked to Duterte arrest

AFP

time14-03-2025

  • Politics
  • AFP

Edited video of Philippine rebel leader falsely linked to Duterte arrest

"You should be scared, BBM," reads the Tagalog-language caption of a reel shared on March 12, 2025, using the popular initials for the Southeast Asian nation's president. It also included a hashtag calling for his impeachment. The video in the post, viewed over 600,000 times, features an interview with rebel leader Nur Misuari. In one part of the clip, he says, "Bongbong Marcos" followed by a cut and then, "He was my number one enemy." Image Screenshot of the false Facebook reel, taken on March 13, 2025 The post surfaced after Duterte was arrested in Manila on an International Criminal Court warrant tied to his deadly war on drugs. He was handed over to the court's custody in The Hague (archived link). The 79-year-old faces a charge of "the crime against humanity of murder", according to the court, for the crackdown that rights groups estimate killed tens of thousands of mostly poor men, often without proof they were linked to drugs. During his presidency, Duterte enlisted Misuari's help to negotiate peace with various armed groups in the country's troubled south (archived link). Duterte's supporters also shared the altered clip in TikTok posts that attacked Marcos Jr, who used to be his political ally until a spectacular meltdown in their family's relations. Marcos Sr A reverse image search of keyframes on Google found the original interview published on the YouTube channel of VICE News on May 11, 2016 (archived link). "Fighting for Peace in the Philippines: VICE News Interviews Nur Misuari," says the video's title. Image Screenshot comparison of the altered video (left) and the VICE News interview An analysis of the interview reveals the "number one enemy" Misuari describes was the late dictator Ferdinand Marcos Sr -- the current president's father and namesake. Misuari's Moro National Liberation Front fought Marcos Sr's government in the 1970s to wage a guerrilla war for a separate Islamic state in the southern Philippines, where most of the nation's Muslim minority live. He signed a peace agreement with the government in 1996 in return for the creation of a Muslim autonomous area (archived link). Misuari told VICE News he was actually supporting Marcos Jr who unsuccessfully ran for vice president in 2016. "The fault of the father cannot be inherited by the son. Neither the father can be accused of the wrongdoings of his son," he says in the clip. AFP has previously fact-checked misinformation following Duterte's arrest here.

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