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A photo purporting to be of an unsafe building under construction in Nairobi, Kenya, has been widely circulated on Facebook, with many calling for city authorities to demolish the apparent nine-storey structure. However, a forensic analysis showed that the picture had been manipulated to make the building appear taller. The city governor tweeted pictures on Friday to show the building being demolished. The misleading image was posted on several Facebook pages , including in this public group which has over one million members according to CrowdTangle data. The manipulated photo showed the alleged nine-storey structure almost tipping over. The caption described the building, located in Nairobi’s eastern Kayole neighbourhood, as unsafe and structurally unsound. Screenshot of Facebook post with the manipulated image of an unsafe building Analysis using a forensic tool built by French university ENS Paris-Saclay showed the image to be a forgery. The actual building is seven storeys high: the picture was manipulated by duplicating the top floor twice to make it appear taller and therefore more dangerous. Picture of the actual building which is seven-storey Some Facebook users even exaggerated the manipulation further adding as many as 10 more floors. Screenshot of the badly photoshopped image of an unsafe building However, this manipulation was clumsy and obvious with even a cursory glance revealing the cloning and pasting at play and the resulting layers in both building and sky. A day after the pictures went viral on social media, Nairobi Governor Mike Sonko ordered the building to be demolished and called for the owner to be arrested. My admin cannot sit back & watch innocent Kenyans trapped in collapsed buildings because of corruption. This morning a multi-agency team led by City Hall officials arrested owner of a condemned 7-storey building in Kayole for building without approvals/ignoring a demolition notice, he tweeted. The construction of unsafe and structurally unsound buildings is common in Kenya’s capital. The Architectural Association of Kenya said that preliminary investigations indicated there were at least 788 dangerous buildings in Nairobi after 38 had been demolished. In April 2016, 52 people were killed after a seven-storey building in Nairobi’s Huruma area collapsed. EDIT November 23 UPDATES with Nairobi governor announcing building demolishedDecember 6 ADDS Google claim review information
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