Philippine Daily Inquirer

EUROPE ON FAKE NEWS ALERT AS ENTIRE CONTINENT PREPARES TO VOTE IN MAY

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BRUSSELS— Will Russian trolls, American social media giants and opportunis­tic fake news merchants combine to poison Europe’s political landscape ahead of May’s continentw­ide election?

Brussels fears that online disinforma­tion will fuel the populist wave officials believe skewed the Brexit referendum and carried Donald Trump all the way to the White House.

“There are external anti-European forces, which are seeking—openly or secretly—to influence the democratic choices of Europeans,” EU leader Donald Tusk warned recently.

This was, he claimed, also “the case with Brexit and a number of election campaigns across Europe.”

Evidence points to Russia

Between May 23 and 26, European voters will go to the polls to choose around 700 Members of the European Parliament to sit in the Strasbourg EU parliament and oversee continentw­ide legislatio­n.

In the final weeks of the campaign, officials are on alert fearing that opponents—including Moscow—will attempt to spread fake news, amplified by viral social media.

This could, in turn, boost support for various populist insurgent parties, deepen existing divisions in the electorate and undermine faith in democracy or EU institutio­ns.

Some go as far as to call the phenomenon a state-led attack.

“There is strong evidence pointing to Russia as a primary source of disinforma­tion in Europe,” said EU Commission Vice President and former Estonian Premier Andrus Ansip.

“Disinforma­tion is part of Russia’s military doctrine and its strategy to divide andweaken the West,” he warned in December.

‘Invisible scourge’

Public trust in national and EU institutio­ns and in the socalled mainstream media is already low, and web users seeking cash from advertisin­g clicks have found a market for fake news.

Add to this state-led covert propaganda and the viral effect of US-based media platforms like Facebook, Twitter and Google’s YouTube and you have a recipe for disruption.

Mariya Gabriel, EU commission­er for the digital economy, brands this as an “invisible scourge” that “intrudes into the lives of our citizens and influences our opinions and decision-making.”

In response to the perceived threat, the EU Commission has drawn up guidelines for member states, calling on them to support quality journalism or to work with independen­t factchecke­rs.

In March, it also set up an “early warning system,” so capitals can share informatio­n on “coordinate­d attempts by foreign actors to manipulate” the democratic debate in real time.

The European External Action Service, the commission’s foreign affairs arm, has a team of around 15, to detect and analyze misinforma­tion campaigns targeting the European Union.

Its website, “EU vs disinforma­tion” (https://euvsdisinf­o.eu/), claims credit for refuting more than 5,000 items of fake news, mainly related to Russia.

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