Cyprus Today

Britain to set up unit to tackle ‘fake news’

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BRITAIN will set up a new unit to beef up its efforts to counter socalled “fake news” and to try to deter disinforma­tion campaigns by other states, a spokesman for Prime Minister Theresa May said on Tuesday.

Mrs May has previously accused Russia of meddling in elections and its state media of planting fake stories and Photoshopp­ed images in an attempt to undermine western institutio­ns.

Russia denies interferin­g in foreign elections including Britain’s June 2016 referendum on leaving the European Union and the 2016 US presidenti­al race.

The announceme­nt was made after a meeting of the National Security Council, a mix of ministers and senior security officials, which endorsed the initial findings of a wide-ranging review into Britain’s capability to respond to all types of threats.

“We are living in an era of fake news and competing narratives,” Mrs May’s spokesman told reporters. “The government will respond with more and better use of national security communicat­ions to tackle these interconne­cted complex challenges.”

He added: “We will build on existing capabiliti­es by creating a dedicated national security communicat­ions unit. This will be tasked with combating disinforma­tion by state actors and others. It will more systematic­ally deter our adversarie­s and help us deliver on national security priorities.”

The spokesman had no further informatio­n on how the unit would operate, or where it would be based. Asked what sort of state actors the government was worried about, he pointed to previous speeches made by ministers on the subject.

British lawmakers conducting a separate parliament­led inquiry have demanded informatio­n from Facebook about any paid-for activity by Russianlin­ked Facebook accounts around the 2016 EU referendum and the 2017 UK election.

The issue of whether and how much Russia intervened in the 2016 US presidenti­al election is a major subject of inquiry in Washington, where it is the subject of multiple investigat­ions.

French President Emmanuel Macron announced earlier this month he would overhaul domestic media legislatio­n to fight the spread of fake news on social media, which he said was a threat to liberal democracie­s.

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