?:reviewBody
|
-
A photo of a fighter jet in flames has been shared hundreds of times in multiple Facebook posts alongside a claim it shows an Indian military jet that was shot down after it flew into the airspace of neighbouring Nepal. The claim is false; the photo shows a Libyan jet that was shot in the city of Benghazi in 2011. This post was published on Facebook on July 24, 2020. It has been shared more than 540 times. The post’s caption reads: ??#Nepal has SHOT DOWN an ?? Indian Air Force Fighter Jet violating Nepalese Airspace, 2× #IAF Pilots DEAD. A screenshot taken on July 28, 2020, of the misleading Facebook post The same photo was also shared with a similar claim here , here and here on Facebook and here , here and here on Twitter. The claim is false. A reverse image search on Google found the photo shows a Libyan jet that was shot down in Benghazi on March 19, 2011. The photo was published by the Associated Press (AP) here . A screenshot taken on July 22, 2020, of the AP webpage showing photo of the crashing jet in Libya in 2011 Below is a screenshot comparison of the AP photo (L) and the photo in the misleading posts (R): A screenshot comparison of the AP photo (L) and the photo in the misleading posts (R) Reuters news agency reported here that the fighter jet was shot down over Benghazi on March 19, 2011. Second photo Other posts, including this one, shared the photo of the 2011 crash in Libya alongside another photo of a plane wreckage. A screenshot taken on July 28, 2020, of a misleading Facebook post The wreckage photo has also been shared in a false context. It shows a military fighter jet that crashed in India in 2019. The photo was published by The Statesman, an Indian newspaper, here . It was credited to the Indo-Asian News Service, a major Indian news agency. A screenshot taken on July 22, of The Statesman report on 2019 plane crash False report In response to the misleading posts, the Indian government’s Press Information Bureau (PIB) said the photos had been shared with false captions. It also said the reports of recent action by the Indian airforce in Nepal were false. Claim: A viral message on twitter claiming that an Indian Airforce jet has been shot down. #PIBfactcheck: It's #Fake. No such claimed action has been conducted by Indian airforce on any neighbouring country. The images used are from a previous date. Beware of panic mongers, the agency said in a tweet on July 24, 2020. A screenshot taken on July 28, 2020, of a tweet by India's Public Information Bureau
(en)
|