New Era

How the Arab uprisings were weakened by online fakes

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TUNIS - The Arab uprisings a decade ago were supercharg­ed by online calls to join the protests - but the internet was soon flooded with misinforma­tion, weakening the region’s cyber-activists.

When Tunisian dictator Zine El Abidine Ben Ali fled the country in January 2011, rumours and uncertaint­y created “panic and hysteria”, said ex-activist and entreprene­ur Houeida Anouar.

“January 14 was a horrible night, so traumatic,” she said. “We heard gunfire, and a neighbour shouted ‘hide yourselves, they’re raping women’.”

As pro-regime media pumped out misinforma­tion, the flood of bogus news also spread to the internet, a space activists had long seen as a refuge from censorship and propaganda.

Journalist and researcher Hakim Beltifa said the ground was ripe for “the spreading of fake news”. “Fake news fed off people’s mistrust” of traditiona­l, state-owned media outlets which “obscured the reality and kept the people in ignorance,” he wrote for online magazine The Conversati­on.

When Egyptian state TV accused American fast food chain Kentucky Fried Chicken of giving free meals to prodemocra­cy protesters at Cairo’s emblematic Tahrir Square, the rumours were repeated online, amid a string of reports of foreign powers allegedly infiltrati­ng the protest movement.

But activists and journalist­s on the ground found little evidence of fried chicken. Most demonstrat­ors were getting by on pita bread and kushari, a popular, ultra-cheap street dish of rice, pasta and lentils.

Soon, a slew of fake stories originatin­g online was underminin­g trust in internet sources. One example was the infamous case of the “Gay Girl of Damascus”.

Amina Abdallah Arraf was a young Syrian- American lesbian, anti- regime activist and author of a blog widely followed by observers of the Syrian uprising. Except she never existed.

When Amina was reported “kidnapped” in Damascus, her worried followers mobilised to rescue her from the hands of the Assad regime.

But they discovered that the blogger, who had been an icon of Syria’s pro-democracy movement, was in fact Tom MacMaster - a bearded American in his 40s living in Scotland and hoping to achieve some literary fame. “That seems fairly bland today as we’ve learned to be more suspicious of this type of fabricatio­n, but at the time, suspicion was far less prevalent,” researcher Yves Gonzalez Quijano said.

Another invented personalit­y was Liliane Khalil, supposedly a US journalist covering the “Arab Spring” for a number of media outlets, and who had indirectly expressed support for the Bahraini government.

Despite a mass of public informatio­n about Khalil, who was accused by many activists and researcher­s of being a fake, her true identity has never been revealed.

The two cases, with their carefully-crafted back stories and manipulate­d images, were early examples of what soon became a trend of misinforma­tion online.

Researcher Romain Lecomte said that regimes were soon able to “infiltrate discussion­s” online, spread doubt about reported abuses and “sow confusion and misinforma­tion”.

“Mass political use of the internet” was a game-changer, said Lecomte.

Many online activists began to question the democratic power of the internet.

That has sparked the phenomenon of fact-checking services, along with dilemmas about whether to allow “fake news” to flourish or to censor it and risk compromisi­ng democratic freedoms.

In the early years of the Arab uprisings, chat rooms and sites such as Lina Ben Mhenni’s blog “A Tunisian Girl” had fuelled growing protest movements and side-stepped censorship.

But the flood of misinforma­tion took away much of the credibilit­y of cyber-activism, said Gonzalez Quijano.

It “has never recovered from being used, or rather manipulate­d, by political powers that are better organised than activists on the ground,” he said.

 ?? Photo: Nampa/AFP ?? Flashback… In this file photo taken on 27 December 2010, a Tunisian protester films as others clash with security forces during a demonstrat­ion in Tunis.
Photo: Nampa/AFP Flashback… In this file photo taken on 27 December 2010, a Tunisian protester films as others clash with security forces during a demonstrat­ion in Tunis.

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