BFF-45 Fake news war: in Libya, battles also rage on social media

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LIBYA-CONFLICT-INTERNET-MEDIA

Fake news war: in Libya, battles also rage on social media

TRIPOLI, April 18, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – On Libya’s front lines, fighters often
hold a gun in one hand and a smartphone in the other, using their cameras in
the propaganda war.

Since strongman Khalifa Haftar launched an offensive to seize the capital
Tripoli, most Libyans have watched the fighting on social media.

Facebook has become the main online battleground, where both sides
weaponise photos and video footage — both real and fake.

Images of wounded, killed or imprisoned fighters are immediately published
by one side or the other as they try to prove their supremacy on the
battlefield.

When rockets slammed into residential areas in the south of the capital
Wednesday, killing six people, both sides, predictably, blamed each other.

While few Libyans trust the TV channels, they now also sift through images,
fake news and propaganda online, from both Haftar’s self-styled Libyan
National Army (LNA) and forces backing the internationally recognised unity
government.

Last week, unity government spokesman Colonel Mohamad Gnounou even accused
Haftar’s forces of “infiltrating certain places, taking pictures and then
withdrawing” so they could claim online to be in control of a particular site
or neighbourhood.

– Fake news war –

This week, an American who had become an unlikely celebrity in Libya took
to the Internet to deny reports by Haftar’s LNA that he had piloted a Libyan
fighter plane as a GNA “foreign mercenary pilot”.

In his own short video post on Twitter, he held up a US newspaper to date
the clip and assured viewers that “I am currently here in the US … I am not
in Libya”.

Warring factions have used fake content to discredit their enemies or hit
their morale.

“It is true that we have a huge wave of misinformation spread through
social networks,” said Libyan analyst Emad Badi.

“Each party has invested considerably to influence the media to adopt a
narrative that is favourable to them”.

Last week, three videos circulated — all purportedly shot at the same
time, in the same place on the front line, but with completely different
messages.

In two of the films, one side claimed that its rivals had laid down their
weapons and surrendered.

A third clip, whose authorship remains a mystery, showed the unlikely scene
of fighters halting combat and embracing each other, crying “united Libya”.

One Internet user quipped that “whatever the real version of the facts, a
united Libya triumphed for at least a few moments”.

– Troll armies –

Social media users have sought to fill the vacuum left by mass media, as
each Libyan television station has long chosen its side and tends to
broadcast videos or photos without verification if they appear to support
their stance.

“There’s no point in turning on the TV,” said one young Libyan, Karim, his
eyes fixed on his phone, as he sat on the terrace of a seaside cafe in
Tripoli.

“Libyan channels are either late or so biased that it’s comical if you’re
not on the same side.”

Some internet users have taken on the role of military experts, pointing to
maps and images of specific weapons to support their take on the truth.

Not surprisingly for a country riven by multiple conflicts since the fall
of late dictator Moamer Kadhafi in 2011, Libya also has armies of online
trolls who spread hatred and incite violence.

“Anonymity on social networks encourages some people to engage in
aggressive and hateful speech and even incitement to crime,” said Mayss
Abdel-Fattah, 26, a sociology student at the University of Zawiya.

“These ‘bad’ users of social networks feel that no-one will come to hold
them accountable, which is very often the case in Libya.”

Despite the toxic posts that flood social networks, there are also rays of
light that cut through the online fog of war.

A group of young Libyans in 2016 launched the “SafePath” group which now
has 162,000 members on Facebook and provides a crucial public service: it
updates users on which roads to avoid because of fighting.

BSS/AFP/ARS/1641 hrs