World

Searching for the truth in the rubble of ‘fake news’ from Aleppo

My dad is injured now. I am crying. Bana.” The seven-year-old girl, Bana Alabed, sent the tweet from eastern Aleppo a few days ago, as Syrian government forces closed in on her neighbourhood.

The first online response to her was not empathy, but total cynicism: “Wow! I’m crying but I can tweet… Propaganda.” As bombs were dropping on Aleppo, a war of words was raging online that made the US “fake news” row look like child’s play. Trapped residents of the city, some of them anti-government activists, posted videos of what they feared would be their last messages to the world before a potential massacre. Naysayers immediately claimed that the videos were a coordinated propaganda campaign mounted by rebels who were Al Qaeda or Isil supporters.

What to believe?

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My dad is injured now. I am crying. Bana.” The seven-year-old girl, Bana Alabed, sent the tweet from eastern Aleppo a few days ago, as Syrian government forces closed in on her neighbourhood.

The first online response to her was not empathy, but total cynicism: “Wow! I’m crying but I can tweet… Propaganda.” As bombs were dropping on Aleppo, a war of words was raging online that made the US “fake news” row look like child’s play. Trapped residents of the city, some of them anti-government activists, posted videos of what they feared would be their last messages to the world before a potential massacre. Naysayers immediately claimed that the videos were a coordinated propaganda campaign mounted by rebels who were Al Qaeda or Isil supporters.

What to believe?

Read the whole story from The Telegraph.

About SOFREP News Team View All Posts

The SOFREP News Team is a collective of professional military journalists. Brandon Tyler Webb is the SOFREP News Team's Editor-in-Chief. Guy D. McCardle is the SOFREP News Team's Managing Editor. Brandon and Guy both manage the SOFREP News Team.

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