Fake news photos justifying return of martial law to Philippines

Concerns about the law relate to country's bitter experience during Marcos dictatorship in 1970s

Mong Palatino | Global Voices 

This photo of a US soldier in a Vietnamese village in 1966 was recently used by a Philippine government news website to report about the status of martial law in Mindanao. (Photo courtesy:Wikipedia)
This photo of a US soldier in a Vietnamese village in 1966 was recently used by a Philippine government news website to report about the status of martial law in Mindanao. (Photo courtesy:Wikipedia)

The southern Philippine island of Mindanao — the second biggest island in the — was placed under martial law on May 23, 2017, after a local group suspected of having ties to attacked various parts of While many supported the government's decision to pursue the militants who attacked the city, there were also critics who think that declaring across the entire island is unnecessary.

Concerns about are related to the country’s bitter experience during the Marcos dictatorship in the 1970s, when led to rampant human rights violations and the restriction of the people’s civil liberties.

Perhaps in order to gather public support for martial law, some officials and supporters of the government started sharing photographs from other countries, trying to pass them off as depictions of the situation in Mindanao. Internet users have been busy debunking the images.

Screenshot of an article posted in a Philippine government news website. The photo of the article is taken from a Wikipedia entry discussing the Source: Facebook page of Tonyo Cruz

The

The image above shows the website of the News Agency (PNA), a government news service, which published an article explaining the difficulties encountered by the army in conducting urban warfare in Marawi. The article’s photo, however, comes from the Wikipedia article on the Vietnam War, which PNA conveniently failed to mention.

After receiving a lot of flak for publishing the photo, the PNA acknowledged its mistake and assured the public that it did not intend to spread misinformation:

While there have been lapses in our judgment, it has never been the policy of PNA to tolerate erroneous report, and it has certainly never been our intention to sow misinformation, much less share what is termed nowadays as “fake news.”

We regret that these mistakes have cast doubt on our integrity as a news agency.

Police in Honduras

On May 28, 2017, Assistant Secretary of the Presidential Communications Operations Office Mocha Uson shared a photo on her popular Facebook page about a group of praying soldiers. Perhaps her aim was to pay tribute to soldiers who are fighting terrorists, but the soldiers in the photo she shared are actually members of the Honduran police force.
 


After being criticized for posting the photo, Ms. Uson claimed that it was merely a symbolism and that she didn’t name the Honduran police as Filipino soldiers. She accused her critics of “lacking common sense.”

 

Thai Coup

Meanwhile, supporters of the president actively shared a Facebook album containing photos of smiling citizens taking selfies with soldiers and tanks to prove that is accepted by Mindanao residents. But the photos are actually from Thailand, recorded when the army grabbed power in 2014.

Global Voices has published several stories about how “coup selfies” informed the world that a junta had taken over Thailand and that some citizens were using selfies to express protest against the military dictatorship. But in the Philippines, these photos were used by the president’s avid supporters to justify in Mindanao.

At the time of this writing, the album containing the Thai coup selfies has more than 33,000 shares..

Facebook user Diwata Luna said this misattribution amounts to an injustice against the real authors of these images:

Why is it a big deal if PNA and Mocha Uson used photos of soldiers from other countries? Because it is an injustice to our OWN soldiers who are fighting. And it is an injustice to journalists who risk their lives to take photos in the middle of a war.

It hasn't all been accusations and acrimony, however. The misuse of famous photos has also encouraged no small amount of humor, such as one journalist's take on PNA's “lapse in judgment.” Some context for the text below: Maute is the group with suspected links to ISIS, and the image is about the clash between Spanish colonists and natives in 1521.


 

 

 


This article, written by Mong Palatino, was published on Global Voices on June 1,2017

Fake news photos justifying return of martial law to Philippines

Concerns about the law relate to country's bitter experience during Marcos dictatorship in 1970s

Concerns about the law relate to country's bitter experience during Marcos dictatorship in 1970s

The southern Philippine island of Mindanao — the second biggest island in the — was placed under martial law on May 23, 2017, after a local group suspected of having ties to attacked various parts of While many supported the government's decision to pursue the militants who attacked the city, there were also critics who think that declaring across the entire island is unnecessary.

Concerns about are related to the country’s bitter experience during the Marcos dictatorship in the 1970s, when led to rampant human rights violations and the restriction of the people’s civil liberties.

Perhaps in order to gather public support for martial law, some officials and supporters of the government started sharing photographs from other countries, trying to pass them off as depictions of the situation in Mindanao. Internet users have been busy debunking the images.

Screenshot of an article posted in a Philippine government news website. The photo of the article is taken from a Wikipedia entry discussing the Source: Facebook page of Tonyo Cruz

The

The image above shows the website of the News Agency (PNA), a government news service, which published an article explaining the difficulties encountered by the army in conducting urban warfare in Marawi. The article’s photo, however, comes from the Wikipedia article on the Vietnam War, which PNA conveniently failed to mention.

After receiving a lot of flak for publishing the photo, the PNA acknowledged its mistake and assured the public that it did not intend to spread misinformation:

While there have been lapses in our judgment, it has never been the policy of PNA to tolerate erroneous report, and it has certainly never been our intention to sow misinformation, much less share what is termed nowadays as “fake news.”

We regret that these mistakes have cast doubt on our integrity as a news agency.

Police in Honduras

On May 28, 2017, Assistant Secretary of the Presidential Communications Operations Office Mocha Uson shared a photo on her popular Facebook page about a group of praying soldiers. Perhaps her aim was to pay tribute to soldiers who are fighting terrorists, but the soldiers in the photo she shared are actually members of the Honduran police force.
 


After being criticized for posting the photo, Ms. Uson claimed that it was merely a symbolism and that she didn’t name the Honduran police as Filipino soldiers. She accused her critics of “lacking common sense.”

 

Thai Coup

Meanwhile, supporters of the president actively shared a Facebook album containing photos of smiling citizens taking selfies with soldiers and tanks to prove that is accepted by Mindanao residents. But the photos are actually from Thailand, recorded when the army grabbed power in 2014.

Global Voices has published several stories about how “coup selfies” informed the world that a junta had taken over Thailand and that some citizens were using selfies to express protest against the military dictatorship. But in the Philippines, these photos were used by the president’s avid supporters to justify in Mindanao.

At the time of this writing, the album containing the Thai coup selfies has more than 33,000 shares..

Facebook user Diwata Luna said this misattribution amounts to an injustice against the real authors of these images:

Why is it a big deal if PNA and Mocha Uson used photos of soldiers from other countries? Because it is an injustice to our OWN soldiers who are fighting. And it is an injustice to journalists who risk their lives to take photos in the middle of a war.

It hasn't all been accusations and acrimony, however. The misuse of famous photos has also encouraged no small amount of humor, such as one journalist's take on PNA's “lapse in judgment.” Some context for the text below: Maute is the group with suspected links to ISIS, and the image is about the clash between Spanish colonists and natives in 1521.
 

 

 


This article, written by Mong Palatino, was published on Global Voices on June 1,2017

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