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A photo of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has been shared thousands of times on Facebook alongside claims he has been declared best prime minister of the world by UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization). The claim is false; Modi has never been given that title by UNESCO as the organisation does not have such an award. The photo of Modi sitting at a desk has been shared multiple times on Facebook, for example in this post published March 31, 2017, and shared more than 6,000 times since. The text on the photo states: Congratulations to be best prime minister of world. Congratulation to all of us Our PM Narendra D. Modi is now declared as the Best PM of the world by UNESCO. Kindly share this. Very proud to be an Indian. The post’s caption alongside the image states: Finally! UNESCO recognised!! Below is a screenshot of the post: Screenshot of the misleading Facebook post The same photo of Modi has been shared elsewhere on Facebook with a similar claim, for example here , published September 3, 2016, and shared more than 2,800 times. But the claim is false; UNESCO has never given an award of best prime minister to Modi or any other political leader. In an email to AFP’s Hong Kong bureau on April 4, 2019, Roni Amerlan, the English Editor for UNESCO Press Service, said it had never bestowed such an award. I can confirm that UNESCO does not establish rankings of political leaders’ performance or give them distinctions such as ‘best prime minister, Amerlan wrote in the email. A reverse image search on Google revealed the image in the misleading posts had been captured from this report dated June 12, 2013, on the website of news magazine India Today. The report’s headline states: A look at Narendra Modi’s new office and the photograph is credited to Shailesh Raval / India Today. Below is a screenshot of the photo in the misleading Facebook post (l) next to the photo in the India Today report (r): Screenshots of the photo in the misleading Facebook post (l) and the photo in the India Today report (r) The India Today report makes no reference to Modi receiving a UNESCO award.
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