Deccan Chronicle

Don’s FB post of kids immune to Covid-19 deleted

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Houston, Aug. 6: Social media giant Facebook, for the first time, has removed a post from US President Donald Trump in which he claimed that children were “almost immune” to Covid-19, saying it violated its policy against spreading “misinforma­tion” about the Coronaviru­s. The post in question was a video clip of a Trump interview on Fox News Channel uploaded by the Trump campaign on Wednesday.

The US President claims in the clip that children are “almost immune” to

Covid-19. While much remains unknown about the Coronaviru­s, children can contract Covid-19 and are believed to be able to spread it to others, even without symptoms.

“This video includes false claims that a group of people is immune from

Covid-19 which is a violation of our policies around harmful Covid misinforma­tion,” Andy Stone, a Facebook policy spokespers­on said in a statement.

A link to the post now diverts to a page that says, “This Content Isn’t Available Right Now.” It is the first time that Facebook has removed a post from Trump entirely, rather than labelling it, as it has done in the past, making it a rare instance in which it has been willing to censor the president.

In June, Facebook removed ads that the Trump campaign posted that featured a symbol Nazis used to classify political prisoners during World War II. Twitter also removed a link to the same video clip, which the official Trump Twitter account @TeamTrump shared earlier on Wednesday.

Links to the tweet now point Twitter users to a message that the tweet violated Twitter’s rules and is no longer available. The Trump campaign accused Facebook of “flagrant bias”. “The President was stating a fact that children are less susceptibl­e to the Coronaviru­s,” Courtney Parella, the campaign’s deputy national press secretary, said in an emailed statement.

A US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention study involving 2,500 children published in April found that about one in five infected children were hospitalis­ed versus one in three adults; three children died. Two months ago, Facebook faced a backlash both inside and outside the company for not taking any action against Trump's May 29 comment, posted on Facebook and Instagram, in which he said about Minneapoli­s protests and civil unrest in the wake of George Floyd's killing by police: “Any difficulty and we will assume control but, when the looting starts, the shooting starts. Thank you!”

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