Dubai Telegraph - TikTok disinformation: the other weapon in Mexico violence

EUR -
AED 4.339808
AFN 73.850324
ALL 96.590533
AMD 445.437145
ANG 2.114621
AOA 1083.463201
ARS 1650.646077
AUD 1.660593
AWG 2.120846
AZN 2.013291
BAM 1.957349
BBD 2.378582
BDT 144.31417
BGN 1.946743
BHD 0.445443
BIF 3503.235663
BMD 1.18153
BND 1.494983
BOB 8.160456
BRL 6.070232
BSD 1.180934
BTN 107.456011
BWP 15.543297
BYN 3.418705
BYR 23157.982795
BZD 2.375179
CAD 1.610372
CDF 2611.181141
CHF 0.908365
CLF 0.026154
CLP 1032.692901
CNY 8.103109
CNH 8.104716
COP 4447.218844
CRC 557.240846
CUC 1.18153
CUP 31.310538
CVE 110.620769
CZK 24.233589
DJF 209.981929
DKK 7.471203
DOP 71.187631
DZD 153.494939
EGP 56.644431
ERN 17.722946
ETB 184.525454
FJD 2.590564
FKP 0.875159
GBP 0.877563
GEL 3.155146
GGP 0.875159
GHS 12.607383
GIP 0.875159
GMD 85.665456
GNF 10373.831488
GTQ 9.058166
GYD 247.075467
HKD 9.241666
HNL 31.346443
HRK 7.530603
HTG 154.802468
HUF 377.05336
IDR 19839.538383
ILS 3.705
IMP 0.875159
INR 107.537343
IQD 1548.394717
IRR 1552902.25334
ISK 143.497242
JEP 0.875159
JMD 184.125666
JOD 0.837751
JPY 184.362951
KES 152.41775
KGS 103.325229
KHR 4740.297709
KMF 492.698313
KPW 1063.340616
KRW 1702.088558
KWD 0.36221
KYD 0.984179
KZT 588.205342
LAK 25302.459675
LBP 105805.988131
LKR 365.208925
LRD 216.988387
LSL 18.893111
LTL 3.488751
LVL 0.714696
LYD 7.479533
MAD 10.80214
MDL 20.21199
MGA 5022.683311
MKD 61.618298
MMK 2481.153312
MNT 4234.305996
MOP 9.51753
MRU 47.214376
MUR 54.752535
MVR 18.266897
MWK 2052.317556
MXN 20.336183
MYR 4.59147
MZN 75.505703
NAD 18.893106
NGN 1605.852953
NIO 43.386217
NOK 11.241588
NPR 171.930018
NZD 1.970089
OMR 0.454291
PAB 1.180934
PEN 3.964078
PGK 5.077156
PHP 68.189039
PKR 330.241934
PLN 4.223898
PYG 7607.018081
QAR 4.301995
RON 5.095706
RSD 117.447645
RUB 91.335709
RWF 1721.488823
SAR 4.431624
SBD 9.509554
SCR 16.677762
SDG 710.694478
SEK 10.662786
SGD 1.494298
SHP 0.886453
SLE 28.951811
SLL 24776.086999
SOS 675.24857
SRD 44.56971
STD 24455.280004
STN 24.812124
SVC 10.333175
SYP 130.620428
SZL 18.869466
THB 36.712537
TJS 11.23679
TMT 4.147169
TND 3.382133
TOP 2.84484
TRY 51.926819
TTD 8.016342
TWD 37.053206
TZS 3030.624165
UAH 50.917082
UGX 4257.368099
USD 1.18153
UYU 45.36589
UZS 14355.586668
VES 488.595558
VND 30772.941934
VUV 140.504966
WST 3.195079
XAF 656.476353
XAG 0.012604
XAU 0.000226
XCD 3.193144
XCG 2.128384
XDR 0.816986
XOF 653.980953
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.799082
ZAR 18.795025
ZMK 10635.189681
ZMW 22.314654
ZWL 380.452092
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • NGG

    0.1100

    93.83

    +0.12%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0400

    18.4

    -0.22%

  • CMSC

    -0.1899

    23.69

    -0.8%

  • BCE

    0.6950

    26.365

    +2.64%

  • CMSD

    -0.1100

    23.48

    -0.47%

  • BCC

    -1.3300

    82.31

    -1.62%

  • RELX

    0.6900

    34.75

    +1.99%

  • GSK

    0.9900

    59.06

    +1.68%

  • VOD

    -0.0200

    15.38

    -0.13%

  • JRI

    0.0750

    13.245

    +0.57%

  • RIO

    -0.2600

    98.83

    -0.26%

  • AZN

    5.7700

    209.75

    +2.75%

  • BTI

    0.1250

    62.795

    +0.2%

  • BP

    0.8750

    38.865

    +2.25%

TikTok disinformation: the other weapon in Mexico violence
TikTok disinformation: the other weapon in Mexico violence / Photo: Enrique Castro - AFP

TikTok disinformation: the other weapon in Mexico violence

While gunmen for the powerful Mexican narcotrafficker Nemesio "El Mencho" Oseguera were burning vehicles and blockading roads across Mexico in response to the killing of their leader, others stoked chaos through different weapon: disinformation.

Text size:

The death of the most-wanted Mexican narco, the leader of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG), in a military operation on Sunday unleashed a wave of criminal violence in 20 out of 32 states.

It also unleashed the mass dissemination of AI-created images shared thousands of times on social media.

The fact-checking team for AFP in Mexico analyzed a dozen of the fake images and videos linked to the operation and its fallout that were shared over 38,500 times on social media.

One of the most disseminated was an aerial image -- made with artificial intelligence -- of Puerto Vallarta, the tourist paradise on the Pacific coast of the western state of Jalisco, that showed multiple buildings in flames.

The henchmen of "El Mencho" did burn vehicles and vandalize businesses in the famous beachside resort town. But the damage wasn't of the magnitude that the false photographs showed.

- 'Magnifying the chaos' -

Behind this digital mobilization, according to multiple analysts, are accounts tied to Oseguera's CJNG.

Alberto Escorcia, a journalist specialized in social media, identified three groups that disseminated false information tied to the wave of violence.

"One was the Jalisco Cartel, magnifying the chaos," he explained to AFP.

Groups of "opportunists" also participated in the disinformation, using them to promote national and international political talking points, he added.

Multiple of these "opportunistic" accounts have already been identified by AFP as disseminators of disinformation in Mexico and the rest of Latin America.

Escorcia was threatened on social media after he shared a video where he demonstrated the disinformation on the platform X during the chaotic morning.

Mexico's security secretary, Omar Garcia Harfuch, claimed that there are "multiple accounts" on social media identified by his office as engines of disinformation tied to the operation.

"We're going to do a deeper job to find out what relationship they have to the criminal organization," while others "were only dedicated to disinformation," he said in a press conference.

- Recruitment-

Academic researchers also detected expressions of sympathy for Oseguera, who until his killing was the most wanted narco in the United States, where the government offered a 15 million dollar compensation in exchange for information leading to him.

"There was a notable and sustained volume of publications and comments with expressions of admiration, mourning," and "aspirational identification" with the druglord, according to Valeria Almaguer, the subdirector of the Seminar on Violence and Peace at the College of Mexico.

This group of investigators, examining Instagram, TikTok, and X, found messages that lamented the death of "El Mencho," accompanied by emojis tied to the CJNG and "narco-corridos," popular songs that celebrate criminal groups.

These symbols coincide with the seminar's findings in an investigation that documented the existence of over 100 accounts on TikTok dedicated to criminal recruitment and propaganda.

"The CJNG leads the use of TikTok as a channel of recruitment and propaganda," they published in an April, 2025 report.

The usage of social media by the CJNG to fill their ranks has also been identified by the Security Secretary's Office.

In March, 2025, following the discovery in Jalisco of a training center for the criminal mafia, the department identified 39 profiles dedicated to recruiting young people that TikTok removed at the request of the authorities.

H.Sasidharan--DT