AFP extends its Facebook fact-checking into Arabic

AFP  |  Paris 

is extending its deal with to counter in Arabic, it said Wednesday.

The new contract means that AFP, one of the world's big three agencies, will extend its worldwide network of fact-checkers -- which is already up and running across 16 countries in English, French, Spanish and Portuguese.

The Arabic teams based in will work with staff covering and the Middle East, where is the leading international agency in Arabic.

They will verify and debunk being spread online, with their articles published on AFP's Fact Check blog and then flagged up by to its users.

AFP's said the ongoing yellow vests protests in had shown once again how disinformation can be shared to millions through groups, "some of whom have a greater reach than some traditional media".

"Information verification is at the heart of AFP's mission and its expertise and is something that our clients benefit from daily," he added.

Survey after survey "shows that the confidence in news has never been as low as it is today," Chetwynd said.

"To contend with we have to find new ways of presenting news...We cannot just report what someone important has said but we have to ask, 'Is that correct?' We want to create a culture of fact checking" to counter the climate of distrust fostered by fake news, Chetwynd added.

The new deal with Facebook includes verification of images, an area in which has particular expertise.

Chetwynd insisted that the agency is "fully independent" in what posts it chooses to investigate, not just posts flagged by the platform. Facebook has come in for heavy criticism for not doing enough to stop the spread of fake news.

Nashwa Aly, its head of policy for the and North Africa, said they "recognise the implications of false news on Facebook and we are committed to doing a better job to fight it.

"This is a responsibility that we take very seriously," she said, adding that more than 181 million people use the network across the region every month.

AFP -- whose fact checks are used by Facebook in more countries than any other news organisation -- is the first to do so in the Arab world.

Facebook launched its programme in December 2016 and it now covers 17 languages.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, February 06 2019. 17:40 IST