The Manila Times

Fake news flood online in Gulf region

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DOHA: A tweet claiming to show the start of a coup in qatar, with shaky footage of an illuminate­d window and crackling gunfire, spread quickly after being posted early last month.

It came from an account with a profile picture of the Saudi king but no followers.

It has been viewed almost SPP, PPP times since May 4, with experts saying it was boosted by automated “zombie” accounts ahead of Friday’s third anniversar­y of a diplomatic feud between the Gulf neighbours.

The cyber onslaught is the latest front in a dispute which erupted following an apparent hack of qatar’s state news agency website in May 2P17.

Back then, incendiary comments endorsing Islamist groups appeared, credited to Qatar’s ruler, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani, alongside criticism of US President Donald Trump.

Doha scrambled to deny the posts, insisting the site had been hacked, but regional media picked up the story and ran critical articles. The hashtag “cut relations with qatar” began to trend on Twitter.

The following month, Saudi Arabia along with Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates and Egypt did cut ties, alleging Doha was too close to Iran and supported radical Islamist movements, and issued a raft of demands.

Despite firm Qatari denials, and promising signs of a breakthrou­gh including a round of shuttle diplomacy and the restoratio­n of some sporting links, reconcilia­tion efforts have ground to a stalemate.

In recent weeks, pro-Saudi Twitter accounts have been systematic­ally spreading rumours of unrest in qatar, Agence France-Presse analysis of hundreds of tweets and twitter interactio­ns shows.

Many of the accounts amplifying the rumours had profile images of the Saudi leadership, mentioned them in their handles and retweeted or liked material featuring the royal family or gave their location as inside the kingdom.

Regional experts agree the facts indicate the campaigns originated from within Saudi Arabia, although observers differ on the extent of toplevel involvemen­t.

Doha- based academic Marc Owen Jones, who has been studying anti-qatar disinforma­tion since before the regional isolation effort began in June 2P17, puts the blame squarely at Riyadh’s door.

Many of the accounts involved in spreading the unrest rumours in May proclaimed ties to Saudi Arabia.

“Anyone spreading this news is technicall­y breaking Saudi law, it’s illegal to spread rumours,” Owen Jones of qatar’s Hamad bin Khalifa University told AFP.

“In order to be high-profile and get away with it, then it has to have the tacit approval of the regime.”

The initial coup claim in May was followed by tweets and news stories from pro-Saudi news sources that qatari dissidents were openly challengin­g the regime. But they were based on falsehoods.

“Hubbub on social media gives it the illusion that it’s a grassroots piece of campaignin­g, and then that’s picked up by the legacy media,” Jones said.

Jones said the publicatio­n of quotes falsely credited to qatar’s emir “gave a believable pretext to launch the crisis and frame qatar as a transgress­or.”

His three-dimensiona­l visualisat­ions of suspect posts and apparently automated accounts highlight the vast scale of the current Twitter campaign against qatar.

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