Daily Dispatch

China tweet that enraged Australia from ‘ unusual ’ accounts

Israeli cybersecur­ity firm said it found evidence of an orchestrat­ed campaign to promote Zhao's tweet

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A Chinese official s tweet of an image of an Australian soldier that sparked a furious reaction from Canberra was amplified across social media by unusual accounts, of which half were likely fake, an Israeli cybersecur­ity firm and Australian experts said.

The digitally altered image of an Australian soldier holding a bloodied knife to the throat of an Afghan child was tweeted by China s foreign ministry spokespers­on Zhao Lijian on Monday.

Twitter declined Australia s request to remove the tweet.

The Chinese embassy in Canberra told ABC television on Friday that Prime Minister Scott Morrison s demand for an apology drew more attention to an investigat­ion into war crimes by Australian soldiers in Afghanista­n.

Cyabra, an Israeli cybersecur­ity firm, said it found evidence of an orchestrat­ed campaign to promote Zhao s tweet.

Cyabra said it had found 57.5% of accounts that engaged with Zhao s tweet were fake, and evidence of a largely orchestrat­ed disinforma­tion campaign to amplify its message.

” The firm did not give any details about who was behind the campaign. Cyabra said it analysed 1,344 profiles and found a large number were created in November and used once, to retweet Zhao s tweet.

The Chinese foreign ministry did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

The Queensland University of Technology ’ s Tim Graham analysed 10,000 replies to Zhao s tweet.

Accounts originatin­g in China were the most active, he said, and 8% of replies were from accounts created on the day, or in the 24 hours prior. Many contained duplicated text.

“When not tweeting about Afghan children, they were tweeting about Hong Kong,” he said. If there s enough of them, those irregulari­ties suggest they were set up for a particular campaign.”

Some of the accounts had already been identified by Graham in a data-set of 37,000 Chinese accounts targeting Australia since June, he said.

When not tweeting about Afghan children, they were tweeting about Hong Kong

Ariel Bogle, a researcher at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, said she had also noticed unusual behaviour by Twitter accounts retweeting or liking Zhao s tweet.

There was a spike in accounts created on November 30 and December 1,” she told Reuters, adding it was too early to determine if it was co-ordinated inauthenti­c behaviour or patriotic individual­s.

Many of the new accounts only followed Zhao, plus one or two other accounts, she said. A third of accounts liking Zhao s tweet had zero followers, ASPI noted.

Earlier this year, Twitter said it had removed 23,750 accounts spreading geopolitic­al narratives favourable to the Chinese Communist Party, and another 150,000 accounts designed to amplify these messages.

A Twitter spokespers­on said the company remains vigilant, but the Cyabra findings don t hold up to scrutiny because it relied only on publicly available data.

A Cyabra spokespers­on said its founders are informatio­n warfare experts with Israeli military background­s, and the US. State Department was among its clients.

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