The Star Malaysia

Fake warzone photograph­er duped BBC and Getty Images

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Brasilia: He went by the name Eduardo Martins and portrayed himself as a Brazilian war photograph­er committed to helping people who worked for the UN – who had a fondness for surfing.

Along the way he developed quite a following on Instagram, with 120,000 or so fans subscribed to his updates ostensibly posted from the Middle East, Africa and elsewhere.

But Martins the war photograph­er never existed, the photos and videos he posted were doctored ones stolen from real photograph­ers who risked their lives in places like Iraq.

No one knows who was behind the scam, which lasted several years and saw photos attributed to Martins published by prestigiou­s news outlets including the BBC and Getty Images.

The bogus images escaped detection because they were edited and inverted to fool software designed to detect plagiarism.

Doubts over the photograph­er’s true identity emerged after he or she contacted a journalist named Natasha Ribeiro, a BBC Brazil contributo­r who lives in the Middle East, the British broadcaste­r said this week.

Ribeiro said alarm bells rang when it emerged that none of the Brazilian journalist­s working in Iraq had ever heard of Eduardo Martins, nor had the UN or any of the organisati­ons he claimed to have worked with, according to the BBC.

Martins sold pictures from war zones but also found time to teach children in Gaza to surf, said Fernando Costa Netto, a journalist interviewe­d Martins for a surfing magazine.

He claimed to have survived leukaemia at 18, but avoided personal contact and always seemed to be somewhere with bad communicat­ions. — AFP

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