Dubai Telegraph - Global fact-checkers battle harassment, threats, financial perils

EUR -
AED 4.337117
AFN 76.762656
ALL 96.690162
AMD 446.927248
ANG 2.114034
AOA 1082.951157
ARS 1706.497244
AUD 1.68244
AWG 2.128702
AZN 2.010433
BAM 1.958639
BBD 2.377497
BDT 144.259118
BGN 1.983289
BHD 0.445186
BIF 3498.629352
BMD 1.180972
BND 1.500475
BOB 8.15679
BRL 6.187232
BSD 1.180436
BTN 106.6506
BWP 16.304635
BYN 3.382103
BYR 23147.04989
BZD 2.374031
CAD 1.611371
CDF 2598.138587
CHF 0.916718
CLF 0.025738
CLP 1016.273935
CNY 8.193815
CNH 8.190282
COP 4306.921972
CRC 586.244855
CUC 1.180972
CUP 31.295756
CVE 110.71603
CZK 24.335932
DJF 209.882176
DKK 7.468644
DOP 74.400996
DZD 153.380222
EGP 55.520676
ERN 17.714579
ETB 183.101047
FJD 2.596718
FKP 0.865051
GBP 0.862514
GEL 3.182672
GGP 0.865051
GHS 12.925722
GIP 0.865051
GMD 86.210869
GNF 10338.228629
GTQ 9.054125
GYD 246.965319
HKD 9.227347
HNL 31.187209
HRK 7.530706
HTG 154.834448
HUF 380.84815
IDR 19800.175432
ILS 3.639773
IMP 0.865051
INR 106.787321
IQD 1546.341572
IRR 49748.442871
ISK 144.999641
JEP 0.865051
JMD 184.988158
JOD 0.83734
JPY 184.110568
KES 152.345521
KGS 103.276207
KHR 4820.140141
KMF 493.646051
KPW 1062.85968
KRW 1713.425195
KWD 0.3627
KYD 0.983726
KZT 591.807883
LAK 25390.698778
LBP 105706.484245
LKR 365.369639
LRD 219.556409
LSL 18.906807
LTL 3.487103
LVL 0.714358
LYD 7.462818
MAD 10.827996
MDL 19.989977
MGA 5231.561506
MKD 61.615362
MMK 2480.182693
MNT 4214.214591
MOP 9.49923
MRU 47.122308
MUR 54.194754
MVR 18.246332
MWK 2046.927884
MXN 20.367101
MYR 4.644173
MZN 75.286955
NAD 18.906807
NGN 1643.747318
NIO 43.442975
NOK 11.372518
NPR 170.641361
NZD 1.956085
OMR 0.454082
PAB 1.180406
PEN 3.97386
PGK 5.057331
PHP 69.713433
PKR 330.134963
PLN 4.224514
PYG 7831.352304
QAR 4.292322
RON 5.094947
RSD 117.380385
RUB 90.936379
RWF 1722.782753
SAR 4.428776
SBD 9.516392
SCR 16.236946
SDG 710.353715
SEK 10.523724
SGD 1.500295
SHP 0.886035
SLE 28.904271
SLL 24764.390087
SOS 673.476269
SRD 45.012156
STD 24443.734644
STN 24.535567
SVC 10.328973
SYP 13061.047544
SZL 18.913657
THB 37.40111
TJS 11.031184
TMT 4.145211
TND 3.413448
TOP 2.843497
TRY 51.367794
TTD 7.995556
TWD 37.305839
TZS 3051.678915
UAH 51.084452
UGX 4208.100049
USD 1.180972
UYU 45.465907
UZS 14450.948049
VES 438.897076
VND 30707.632207
VUV 141.17053
WST 3.219703
XAF 656.909254
XAG 0.013897
XAU 0.000238
XCD 3.191635
XCG 2.127384
XDR 0.816137
XOF 656.909254
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.514175
ZAR 18.859625
ZMK 10630.156708
ZMW 23.165483
ZWL 380.272481
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RYCEF

    0.2800

    16.95

    +1.65%

  • GSK

    0.8700

    53.34

    +1.63%

  • NGG

    1.6200

    86.23

    +1.88%

  • VOD

    0.3400

    15.25

    +2.23%

  • BTI

    0.8800

    61.87

    +1.42%

  • BP

    1.1200

    38.82

    +2.89%

  • CMSC

    -0.0900

    23.66

    -0.38%

  • RELX

    -5.0200

    30.51

    -16.45%

  • RIO

    3.8500

    96.37

    +4%

  • BCE

    0.2700

    26.1

    +1.03%

  • BCC

    3.1800

    84.93

    +3.74%

  • JRI

    -0.0300

    13.12

    -0.23%

  • AZN

    -4.0900

    184.32

    -2.22%

  • CMSD

    -0.1400

    23.94

    -0.58%

Global fact-checkers battle harassment, threats, financial perils
Global fact-checkers battle harassment, threats, financial perils / Photo: Indranil MUKHERJEE - AFP/File

Global fact-checkers battle harassment, threats, financial perils

From India and South Korea to Croatia and North Macedonia, fact-checking organizations battling an ever-rising tide of misinformation in a major election year are buffeted by legal threats, harassment and funding shortfalls.

Text size:

Fact-checkers, largely under-resourced and increasingly under attack, have their work cut out this year as dozens of countries hold elections, a period when falsehoods typically explode.

Debunking fake political claims and hoaxes that threaten election integrity, likened by some researchers as a seemingly endless game of whack-a-mole, comes with a litany of challenges that are piling pressure on fact-checkers in a crucial year.

The most significant is raising funds to sustain operations, according to a new survey by the International Fact-Checking Network (IFCN) of 137 organizations across 69 countries.

The Seoul National University (SNU) FactCheck Center, South Korea's only local debunking platform, faces possible shutdown after its biggest donor –- the search engine company Naver –- pulled financial support last year.

Naver declined to comment on the reason, but the outfit's director Chong Eun-ryung believes "political pressure" from the ruling People Power Party was the "biggest factor."

SNU FactCheck Center has been accused of bias by ruling party lawmakers, a charge it rejects.

The development follows the closure of another outfit, Fact-check Net, last year after the government cut off its funding.

- 'Information warfare' -

"Fact-checkers are facing growing amounts of misinformation with limited resources for reporting and publishing," Angie Drobnic Holan, director of IFCN, told AFP.

"There are also campaigns of online and legal harassment against fact-checkers from those who prefer more cutthroat information warfare, without checks based on evidence and logic."

The IFCN survey said about 72 percent of organizations faced harassment, while many also reported physical and legal threats.

Croatian fact-checking website Faktograf.hr has been forced to invest in security measures after its staff received death threats and female reporters faced sexist insults, executive director Ana Brakus told AFP.

A text message received by one staff member warned that his fingers would be "cut off."

"We had to find ways to deal with that kind of stress" without affecting the fact-checking mission, Brakus said, adding the organization offered mental health support to its staff.

In India, home to the largest number of certified fact-checkers, Prime Minister Narendra Modi -- tipped to win a third consecutive term in upcoming parliamentary elections -- has been accused of stifling independent media.

Mohammed Zubair, co-founder of Alt News and a frequent target of government rebuke, continues to face legal threats after being briefly jailed in 2022 over accusations that he insulted a Hindi god in a tweet four years earlier.

During a fundraising drive on X, formerly Twitter, Zubair wrote Indian media organizations were being "forced to censor themselves" and in some cases, "becoming government mouthpieces."

- 'Existential threats' -

With their shoestring budgets, many fact-checkers must turn to external funding support to defend themselves against the "existential threats" that lawsuits -- often frivolous -- present, the IFCN report said.

In some cases, fact-checkers are themselves targeted by disinformation.

Truthmeter, the fact-checking service of the North Macedonia-based Metamorphosis Foundation, faced a sweeping smear campaign earlier this year after its fact-checks of Facebook posts prompted accusations that it was censoring content.

The campaign, the group said in a note to readers, escalated into insults, slander and "badly disguised calls for violence" against its staff.

"We are fully aware that such disinformation campaigns, full of attacks, manipulations, threats and hate speech will continue, especially in the pre-election period," it said, as North Macedonia gears up for the presidential race later this month.

Content moderation on social media has become a hot-button issue even in advanced economies such as the United States –- which faces elections in November -- with many users equating fact-checking with censorship.

"'Who fact-checks the fact-checkers?' is a common response to our work," said Eric Litke, who heads a US-based fact-checker, stressing the need for transparency to gain reader trust.

Fact-checking organizations, including AFP –- which debunks misinformation as part of Meta's third-party fact-checking program -- routinely face online abuse from people who dispute their ratings, sometimes even when they peddle blatantly false information.

"I've watched this movement label fact-checkers as part of a 'censorship industrial complex,'" said Holan.

"Ironically, this deeply misleading argument itself is aimed at suppressing critique and debate."

burs-ac/md/acb

A.El-Nayady--DT