Yorkshire Post

Community leaders join efforts to dispel misinforma­tion on jab

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SHAREABLE VIDEOS of an imam, a pastor and clinicians have been created with the aim of dispelling misinforma­tion about the coronaviru­s vaccine.

A series of clips and images have been put together by the Government with the support of social media giants including Facebook and Twitter, in a bid to address concerns about low vaccine uptake among ethnic minority communitie­s.

Trusted community figures feature in the material, urging people to be mindful of misinforma­tion and “check before you share”.

The campaign is particular­ly aimed at countering the spread of misleading and false details via private messaging apps such as WhatsApp, where it is harder to detect.

It comes after Vaccines Minister Nadhim Zahawi said anti-vaccinatio­n messages are “very, very cleverly, hyper super-forensical­ly targeted at different communitie­s” with false claims about fertility “proving to be sadly quite potent”.

The campaign is the first to be designed by the Government specifical­ly for private instant messaging services, the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) said.

The Rev Alton Bell, senior pastor at the Wembley Family Church, said: “As a faith leader and scientist in the black community, I’m lending my voice to this campaign because it is absolutely vital people get the facts about the vaccine, not rumours which could do them harm if they believe them.

“My message is simple: be aware of false informatio­n online and check before you share.”

Qari Asim, a senior imam at the Makkah Mosque in Leeds and chairman of the Mosques and Imams National Advisory Board, who also took part, said: “It’s natural that people might have questions about vaccines, but we’re seeing instances where they’ve relied on unfounded theories or fake news to make a decision to delay taking the vaccine.

“We want people to be aware of the false informatio­n that is being circulated on these platforms and make informed choices based on the informatio­n from the health authoritie­s and faith leaders.”

 ??  ?? QARI ASIM: ‘We want people to be aware of the false informatio­n that is being circulated.’
QARI ASIM: ‘We want people to be aware of the false informatio­n that is being circulated.’

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