The Pak Banker

Global fact-checkers battle threats, financial perils

- WASHINGTON -AFP

From India and South Korea to Croatia and North Macedonia, factchecki­ng organisati­ons battling an everrising tide of misinforma­tion in a major election year are buffeted by legal threats, harassment and funding shortfalls.

Fact-checkers, largely underresou­rced and increasing­ly under attack, have their work cut out this year as dozens of countries hold elections, a period when falsehoods typically explode.

Debunking fake political claims and hoaxes that threaten election integrity, likened by some researcher­s as a seemingly endless game of whacka-mole, comes with a litany of challenges that are piling pressure on factchecke­rs in a crucial year.

The most significan­t is raising funds to sustain operations, according to a new survey by the Internatio­nal Fact-Checking Network (IFCN) of 137 organisati­ons across 69 countries.

The Seoul National University (SNU) FactCheck Center, South Korea’s only local debunking platform, faces possible shutdown after its biggest donor the search engine company Naver pulled financial support last year.

Naver declined to comment on the reason, but the outfit’s director Chong Eun-ryung believes “political pressure” from the ruling People Power

Party was the “biggest factor.” SNU FactCheck Center has been accused of bias by ruling party lawmakers, a charge it rejects. The developmen­t follows the closure of another outfit, Factcheck Net, last year after the government cut off its funding.

“Fact-checkers are facing growing amounts of misinforma­tion with limited resources for reporting and publishing,” Angie Drobnic Holan, director of IFCN, said.

“There are also campaigns of online and legal harassment against fact-checkers from those who prefer more cutthroat informatio­n warfare, without checks based on evidence and logic.” The IFCN survey said about 72 per cent of organisati­ons faced harassment, while many also reported physical and legal threats.

Croatian fact-checking website Faktograf.hr has been forced to invest in security measures after its staff received death threats and female reporters faced sexist insults, executive director Ana Brakus said.

A text message received by one staff member warned that his fingers would be “cut off.” “We had to find ways to deal with that kind of stress” without affecting the fact-checking mission, Brakus said, adding the organisati­on offered mental health support to its staff.

In India, home to the largest number of certified fact-checkers, Prime Minister Narendra Modi tipped to win a third consecutiv­e term in upcoming parliament­ary elections has been accused of stifling independen­t media.

Mohammed Zubair, co-founder of Alt News and a frequent target of government rebuke, continues to face legal threats after being briefly jailed in 2022 over accusation­s that he insulted a Hindi god in a tweet four years earlier.

During a fundraisin­g drive on X, formerly Twitter, Zubair wrote Indian media organizati­ons were being “forced to censor themselves” and in some cases, “becoming government mouthpiece­s.”

With their shoestring budgets, many fact-checkers must turn to external funding support to defend themselves against the “existentia­l threats” that lawsuits often frivolous present, the IFCN report said. In some cases, fact-checkers are themselves targeted by disinforma­tion.

Truthmeter, the fact-checking service of the North Macedonia-based Metamorpho­sis Foundation, faced a sweeping smear campaign

earlier this year after its factchecks of Facebook posts prompted accusation­s that it was censoring content. The campaign, the group said in a note to readers, escalated into insults, slander and “badly disguised calls for violence” against its staff.

“We are fully aware that such disinforma­tion campaigns, full of attacks, manipulati­ons, threats and hate speech will continue, especially in the preelectio­n period,” it said, as North Macedonia gears up for the presidenti­al race later this month.

Content moderation on social media has become a hot-button issue even in advanced economies such as the United States — which faces elections in November — with many users equating fact-checking with censorship.

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