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An image shared hundreds of times on Facebook purports to show how a Durban-based home affairs department employee let people wait in a queue while she played cards on her computer. The image is real and went viral in 2012 -- however, it was not taken in South Africa, but at a bank in India. The Facebook post, which we’ve archived here , was posted on June 25 and reads: Durban Home Affairs. A screenshot taken on June 28, 2019 of the misleading Facebook post Comments on the post were mixed, with some believing the picture was really taken in Durban, South Africa. But another user cast doubt on the photo. Is this legitimate? The nationality of the people seems more Asian, reads the comment by Sabelo Kotswana. Durban is known for having residents of many cultural backgrounds, including a diverse Indian population. Kotswana also did a reverse image search and found three links related to India, which led him to believe the post was misleading. A screenshot taken on June 28, 2019 of comments on the misleading Facebook post This 2017 article on the Indian website OfficeChai includes the photo, saying it showed an SBI (State Bank of India) cashier playing a card game on her computer as harried customers waited in line. It had gone viral many years ago, the article adds. The image can be found posted on Imgur in 2012 and then again in a Reddit discussion in a post claiming that it was taken at a vehicle registration office in India. A screenshot taken on July 2, 2019 of an Imgur post However, other Reddit users correctly noted that it wasn’t taken at a vehicle registration office. One user noticed markings on the back of the woman’s chair -- SBI/IND/CAH/157 -- and a distinctive pale blue booklet propped up on the counter that they recognised from the bank. A screenshot taken on June 28, 2019 of the Reddit discussion on the picture AFP’s Fact Check team in India helped us look into the detail on the chair and suggested it may show a banking reference code . Under the coding system, SBI stands for State Bank of India and IND for India. A search for the full code appearing on the back of the chair returns links relating to the bank. Online searches of the SBI booklet also resemble the book propped up against the window, as the Reddit user suggested. A Bailley water bottle produced by Parlé Agro in India can also be seen on the window counter. A stock image saved on June 1, 2019 from Google Images (Kryptomoney.com) of SBI Passbook An image showing the markings AFP used to verify the location as India We haven’t yet been able to track down the exact SBI branch in India where the photo was taken -- if you have any leads, you can contact us here .
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