Bangkok Post

Chile rocked by fake news claim

PINERA SAYS PROTEST VIDEOS ON SOCIAL MEDIA A DISINFORMA­TION CAMPAIGN

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>>SANTIAGO: Chilean President Sebastian Pinera, whose government has recently been rocked by riots over inequality, ignited a fresh wave of anger after claiming that “many” videos on social media of police abuse of demonstrat­ors were simply “fake news”, and unrest was being fomented by foreign government­s.

Mr Pinera told CNN Chile in an interview that there had been a “gigantic” disinforma­tion campaign with videos circulatin­g on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter that had been “filmed outside of Chile or misreprese­nted.”

“There has doubtless been some participat­ion by foreign government­s and institutio­ns,” he said.

Mr Pinera’s comments were first screened by CNN on Dec 15, but only gained widespread renown on Thursday when they became the subject of intense debate.

On Friday, after Santiago residents were called to a “K-Pop rally” in the city’s central Plaza Italia, thousands of people gathered to bang pots and pans and chant anti-government slogans, with a massive deployment of police who moved in to disperse them with water cannons and tear gas.

Mr Pinera has been blamed by the political opposition, human rights organisati­ons and activist groups for failing to act more quickly on widespread claims of rights abuses by security forces policing the protests since they began over inequality on Oct 18. With more than 26 people killed during the unrest and thousands more injured and arrested, Mr Pinera’s approval ratings have tumbled to as low as 10%.

The claims of foreign interferen­ce are not new: the US State Department said it had seen indication­s of Russian “influence” on the unrest, “skewing it through the use and abuse of social media, trolling”.

However, Mr Pinera’s claims were met with fury from both his political opponents and members of his own governing coalition, Chile Vamos.

Manuel Jose Ossandon, a senator for centre-right party National Renewal, told La Tercera newspaper: “Enough. Chile is living a decisive moment. These declaratio­ns don’t help, they divide.”

Sergio Micco, the head of Chil’s Human Rights Institute which has reviewed online content as part of an investigat­ion into police handling of the protests, told a local radio station that while the group had seen misleading material, the “immense majority” was authentic.

And Jorge Abbott, Chile’s attorney general, said: “At the moment, the images we have analysed don’t fall in that category (of coming from abroad).”

On Thursday night, the president tweeted that he had not expressed himself “clearly enough” and said human rights abuses “should always be condemned.”

Last week, the government gave prosecutor­s a report it said had been sent to its intelligen­ce agency by an undisclose­d source that analyzed 5 million social media accounts tweeting at the peak of the unrest.

The report, the government confirmed, highlighte­d that one in five tweets about the unrest was generated outside of Chile, and among the most active accounts were fans of Korea’s K-pop culture.

Friday’s call for a “K-Pop rally” in Santiago included the ambitious promise of a closing concert by South Korean megaband BTS.

During the evening, as protesters gathered, the nearby Alameda Art Centre, whose lobby has been used as a triage centre by volunteer medics during the protests, was set alight and almost totally destroyed, Santiago firefighte­rs said.

 ??  ?? KEEPING UP THE FIGHT: People demonstrat­e at Plaza Italia in Santiago, Chile as police tried to use water cannons and tear gas to disperse demonstrat­ors.
KEEPING UP THE FIGHT: People demonstrat­e at Plaza Italia in Santiago, Chile as police tried to use water cannons and tear gas to disperse demonstrat­ors.

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