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A video has been viewed thousands of times in social media posts claiming it shows livestock that drowned in Pakistan after the South Asian nation was battered by monsoon rains in July 2022. However, the video has been shared in a false context; it has circulated since 2020 in reports about livestock killed in floods in northern Saudi Arabia. The 21-second clip was shared here on Facebook on July 5, 2022. It has been viewed more than 8,300 times. Depressing. During the rain, livestock from Balochistan’s famous goat market drowned in the flood and lost their lives, the post's Urdu-language caption reads. Screenshot of the false post, taken on July 12, 2022 The video circulated online after Pakistan was battered by deadly monsoon rains, AFP reported . Most of the deaths were in the country's southwestern province of Balochistan, where 39 people drowned or were electrocuted by downed power lines. The video was shared alongside a similar claim on Facebook here , here and here ; and on Twitter here and here ; and on YouTube here and here . However, the video has been shared in a false context. Saudi Arabia floods A reverse image search, followed by a keyword search, on Google found the same video published by weather portal Arabia Weather on November 12, 2020. There is neither might nor power except with God. A great loss, may the Lord compensate him. More than a thousand sheep died in #Arar Valley due to torrential rains, the Arabic-language tweet reads. لا حول ولا قوة إلا بالله ربي يعوضه خير، خسارة كبيرة والله اكثر من ألف رأس من الأغنام نفقت في شعيب #عرعر بسبب السيول pic.twitter.com/UruWA1E3NN — طقس العرب - السعودية (@ArabiaWeatherSA) November 12, 2020 Arar Valley is located near Arar , the capital of Saudi Arabia's Northern Borders province. On November 12, 2020, Saudi Arabia's Al-Marsd Newspaper published screenshots of the video in its report about 1,000 sheep that died in the Arar Valley after torrential rain. Below are two screenshot comparisons of the video in the misleading post (top) and the photos in Al-Marsd's report (bottom): Screenhot comparisons of the video in the misleading post (top) and the photos in Al-Marsd's report (bottom) Parts of the footage were also used in November 2020 reports about sheep killed by flooding in Arar by Kuwait News , a newspaper owned by Kuwait-based Q8News, and online media outlet Iraq News .
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