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Tuesday, December 20, 2016

Images of Aleppo Suffering Often Fake Like This One Shot in Egypt

Caught Red-Handed (Red Paint not Blood) 
It seems 'truth' is almost irrelevant these days. Technology combined with a complete lack of the fear of God has created an atmosphere where truth is virtually impossible to determine in many areas. What we know about the Syrian war is what we are told and what we are told frequently is completely unrelated to the truth.
For me, I am glad the Aleppo siege is virtually over. I may not like the way it was done, but I honestly cannot believe half of what I have heard about it. But, at least it's done! Without Russian involvement it might have gone on for several more years as western forces had no actual plan to win the battle or the war. That would have been a far greater tragedy.

Red paint not blood: Photographer nabbed shooting
fake images of ‘Aleppo suffering’ in Egypt

© MoiEgy / Facebook

It was destined to be an iconic image: a small girl holding a teddy bear in a white dress marked by blood splotches with the ruins of Aleppo behind her. However, it was also a set-up, shot hundreds of miles away in a different country, with help of a posing child and some paint.

Egypt’s Interior Ministry has revealed on its Facebook page that it arrested a group of five people caught in the act of producing images purportedly depicting scenes of suffering in Aleppo that they had planned to pass off as real pictures from Syria.

© MoiEgy / Facebook

The ministry said that the residents of Port Said, a city on the Suez Canal, were caught in the middle of their shoot as the 12-year-old star, Ragd, was posing for 21-year-old Mustafa, who told the authorities that he “normally photographed weddings and ceremonies, but had an idea for something else.”

© MoiEgy / YouTube

“In a conversation with them, the suspects revealed that they had shot a series of scenes to be spread on social media, as actual pictures from Aleppo,” said the ministry, which posted a video of the arrest, and interviews with the suspects online.

The stand-in for Aleppo was “the ruins of a house that had been slated for demolition by the authorities some time earlier.” The blood was obtained from a “tin of red paint” that was liberally smeared on the girl, her fake bandages, and her stuffed animal.

The girl herself was known to the photographer beforehand, and came to the session with her mother, the photographer, and three other local men.

Mustafa is being detained in jail for an initial four days, while the others have been set free, and Ragd has been returned to her guardian.

While it is unknown whether Mustafa’s staged photo would have gained social media traction, vivid photographs – some of them fake – have been powerful tools in shaping public opinion since Aleppo was re-captured by Syrian government forces earlier this month.

The most notorious hoax picture, which has been shared thousands of times on Twitter and Facebook, features a girl running through a debris-filled street. The caption reads “Girl running to survive, all her family have been killed. It’s not in Hollywood. This real in Syria.” In fact, the image was cut from a 2014 Lebanese pop video.


Another video, called “Executions have begun in the middle of the street in Aleppo,” which has also been widely shared, depicts supposed government forces allegedly taking out retribution on civilians. In reality, the video dates back from 2012, and contains unverified images.

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