Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan had shared a seven-year-old video of violence from Bangladesh and shamelessly, without verifying, claimed it to be the case of police brutality against Muslims in Uttar Pradesh
Islamabad: Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan on Friday (January 3) posted a tweet of a seven-year-old video of violence from Bangladesh and claimed it to be the case of police brutality against Muslims in Uttar Pradesh.
He, however, deleted the video after facing massive backlash on social media for posting the fake video.
"Indian police's pogrom against Muslims in UP," Khan had tweeted.
The seven-year-old video showed police action against a group of people in Bangladesh. At one point in the video, a policeman could be seen holding a shield of Rapid Action Battalion (RAB), proving it to be a scene from Bangladesh.
The RAB is an anti-terrorism unit of the Bangladesh Police.
However, the ministry of external affairs (MEA) slammed Imran Khan for peddling a seven-year-old video from Bangladesh as a case of what he claimed to be "Indian police's pogrom against Muslims in UP".
"Tweet Fake News. Get Caught. Delete Tweet. Repeat. #Oldhabitsdiehard," external affairs ministry spokesperson Raveesh Kumar tweeted.
A now-deleted video shared by Khan was soon fact-checked and found to be of 2013 and showed police action against a group of people in Bangladesh. The Pakistan Prime Minister had tried to pass off the clip as a case of police brutality "against Muslims" in Uttar Pradesh.
At one point in the now-deleted video, a policeman is seen holding a shield of Rapid Action Battalion (RAB), proving that it was an incident in Bangladesh. The RAB is an elite anti-crime and anti-terrorism unit of the Bangladesh Police.
Khan faced a strong backlash on social media for tweeting the face video with users saying that he does not even do basic fact-checking.
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