Remember this "exclusive" story in the Daily Star about "general Pavel", who was supposedly "dragged out of retirement" by Putin and sent to Ukraine?
So yeah, turns out that's total bullshit.
@Lotte_Lambrecht and I found out who's _actually_ in this photo. Follow along!
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The Daily Star quoted an anonymous "senior intelligence source" for the article.
It was picked up by virtually every other tabloid in the UK and by a lot of international newspapers. In Belgium @HLN_BE also ran the story: archive.ph/166h9
Reverse Image Search didn't reveal much, apart from the fact that the earliest online version of the photo was a Russian fat joke on Twitter (June 5th) calling our chonky guy the "Commander-in-chief of the Canteen".
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In June, the photo also circulated on Reddit, in the r/AbsoluteUnits and PhotoshopBattle-subreddits.
Meme-pages were also having a lot of fun with it.
But nobody mentioned anything about the actual context of the photo.
Also, a lot of people were sceptical of the Daily Star's story. 'Pavel' is only a first name, for instance, and some claimed that the camo worn by 'general Pavel' was actually Ukrainian instead of Russian.
So I became obsessed with finding out where this picture was taken.
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We resorted to PimEyes and its facial recognition search capabilities to identify the people on the photo.
We didn't find 'Pavel', but the people to his left turned out to be local administrators from the Yelansky district (Volgograd Oblast), some 800 km from Moscow.
6/
Could we find our 'Pavel' in the Yelansky district? Off to Google Maps!
Unfortunately, however, there's no Google Streetview available for Yelan, the largest town in the district. But there are some visitor's photos available for its 'Central Park'.
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At about the 50th photo, we spot a pretty distinctive war monument that's also visible in the background of the picture with 'general Pavel'.
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The pavement on our picture also matches the pavement in Yelan's central park.
Importantly, at that exact location, there also seems to be a smaller monument in the background, consisting of a red-green pole and a black memorial plaque.
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So we have confirmed a location: a park in Yelan, Volgograd Oblast, near some memorials.
But when was this photo taken? Who are the other people in it? And why would 'general Pavel' be there?
10/
It turns out those red-green posts are Russian border pillars.
But Yelan is not near the Russian border. So that leaves the possibility of a memorial for the Border Guard.
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And sure enough, the green hats worn by several people in the photo, including our 'general Pavel', turn out to be the (ceremonial) caps of the Russian border guard.
The Border Guard is part of the FSB, not the army.
Cue my colleague @Lotte_Lambrecht, who - through some deep searches on Russian search engine Yandex - finds an article on local news site Elanskie-Vesti about a ceremony in Yelan's park on 27 May 2022, with... a larger, original version of our photo!
But even though, at this point in our research, we know the exact location and date of the picture, and even though we have identified several other people in it, we still don't know anything about 'general Pavel'.
But that is about to change.
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On the Russian social network Odnoklassniki, Lotte finds a group for border guard veterans from Yelan.
And soon after, we find our elusive 'general Pavel'.
Who turns out... not to be a general named Pavel. 😬
16/
Our '67-year old general Pavel' turns out to be the 58-year old Ivan Ivanovich Turchin, veteran of both the Russian military and the Border Guard.
He retired in 2011, after 20 years of service at the border in Uzbekistan.
His social media are absolutely packed with photos from his past, and several pictures of him attending Yelan's Border Guard Day ceremony, at least since 2013.
His recent posts include recipes, songs and inspirational quotes. Nothing indicates that he's in Ukraine.
18/
So this 'exclusive' story - first published by the Daily Star, and picked up by The Sun, The Daily Mail, the New York Post etc. - turns out to be entirely fictional.
We have reached out to the Daily Star for comment but have not received a reply, as of today.
As I cannot keep up with all mentions coming from this thread: send me a private message if you need to ask me something. DMs are always open, especially for fact-checking requests or other tips.
Just a final note: the message here is _not_ that "(western) media can't be trusted!"
Lotte works for @Knack, I work for @Knack and public broadcaster @vrtnws. So we are both journalists for "western media".
(But yes, evidently all media that ran this story should retract it.)
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Bon, we moeten (helaas) nog eens praten over @DoorbraakBe, meerbepaald over hoe antivax-desinfo verzeilde in een Alain Grootaers-column.
Ook een goed moment om bepaalde onzin over "Facebook-censuur en factchecks" uit te klaren. Inclusief uitstapje naar het #lentesymposium!
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Ik ga nu al waarschuwen dat dit een lang verhaal wordt, dus al wie zijn zonnige namiddag niet wil laten verpesten door "Nonkel Arbiter Zaagt Over Fake News", die mute de thread beter nu al. 😬
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We schrijven 10 maart. Op Doorbraak verschijnt "Covid: de grootste fraude ooit", een column van Grootaers over wat hij "opmerkelijke nieuwsfeiten" noemt.
De ferme claims erin zijn legio. "Lijken uit de kast"! "Onthutsende data"! "Wetenschappelijke en institutionele fraude"!
Een draadje over de betoging in Brussel gisteren en de discussie over "#Antifa".
Hoe zit dat nu precies? Wie waren de relschoppers? En wat is “Antifa” precies?
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Ik heb de betoging gisteren gevolgd.
Zoals toen ook al getweet: de vroegste confrontatie met politie is begonnen in de Wetstraat ten westen van het Jubelpark, waar Franse anarchisten stenen gooiden, terwijl in het park zelf de speeches bezig waren.
Je kon er dit weekend niet aan ontsnappen: plotseling ging onderstaand artikel viraal, dat in 2010 verscheen op @HLN_BE.
Eén klein probleem: het artikel is onzin, en Het Laatste Nieuws heeft het bijna letterlijk gekopieerd van de extreemrechtse conspiracy-blogger 'Fjordman'.
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We namen contact op met Maria Bäckman, de Zweedse onderzoekster die aan de basis zou liggen van dit verhaal.
Bäckman voerde in 2004-2005 een etnologische studie uit over een 30-tal leerlingen van één middelbare school in een buitenwijk van Stockholm.
Ze observeerde en interviewde de jongeren over hun sociale, economische, culturele en genderidentiteit.
Daarbij getuigde een handvol meisjes dat ze hun blonde haar gekleurd hadden om allerlei vooroordelen over "domme blondjes" en cat-calling te ontwijken.
Op 11/03 heeft Groen, ter herdenking van de Fukushima-kernramp, korte tijd een foto op Facebook gezet van een brandende fabriek.
Maar dat was helemaal geen kerncentrale: het was een oliebedrijf in Ichihara, 300 km verderop.
Een draadje over algoritmes en geschiedvervalsing.
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Na drie uur is die afbeelding vervangen door een nieuwe (de ingepakte man met helm en masker). Zij het zonder bericht van rechtzetting.
(Je kan zulke dingen altijd checken via de "Edit history"-knop van een Facebook-post.)
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Waarom precies "algoritmes en geschiedvervalsing"?
Wel, wanneer je op de foto van die brandende fabriek een "reverse image search" uitvoert, één van de eerste stappen die elke factchecker onderneemt, dan geeft Google Images je als suggestie "japan tsunami nuclear disaster".
As promised: a follow-up on the bizarre astroturf behavior surrounding a recent Huawei campaign to put pressure on the Belgian government and its 5G policy - you might remember Mike Bai's sponsored tweets.
The same day, @FT devoted an article to the suspiciously large Twitter followings of Mike Bai and several other accounts of Huawei Europe team members. Accounts that were only a couple of months old, but attracted hundreds of thousands of followers.