SAPS denies claims linking Nigerian national’s death in custody to anti-immigrant protests - IOL
Image: Sandi Kwon Hoo / DFA
"Fire is raging at mosques across India. Oh Allah please save the world's Muslims," the Facebook post's Bengali-language caption reads.
It shares an 18-second video showing a building on fire, and has been viewed thousands of times since it was uploaded on December 22, 2024.
The post surfaced after Hindu activists attempted to storm a Bangladeshi consulate during a protest in Agartala, a small Indian city not far from the two countries' shared border (archived link).
Relations between the two countries have been frayed by the student-led uprising in August that toppled Bangladesh's autocratic former leader Sheikh Hasina, who is now residing in India.
Public sentiment in the Muslim-majority nation of 170 million continues to be stacked against their Hindu-majority neighbour, which was Hasina's main international patron during her iron-fisted, 15-year rule.
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Screenshot of the false post, taken on March 3
The video was shared elsewhere on Facebook along with the false claim.
But the building in the video is in fact a mosque in Indonesia and there have been no official reports of mosques burned in India.
A Google reverse image search with keyframes of the clip found a longer video showing the similar scene in an Instagram post published on December 8, 2024 (archived link).
The Indonesian-language caption of the post reads, "Luwuk Banggai Central Market Complex fire".
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Screenshot comparison of the video in the false post (left) and on Instagram
Further keyword search...
Image: Sandi Kwon Hoo / DFA