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Abra poll violence spills into NCR

BAGUIO CITY — A recent kidnapping case solved in Parañaque City in the National Capital Region (NCR) has been linked by police to political violence related to the upcoming village and youth polls in Abra.

Last Wednesday, police from the Anti-Kidnapping Group rescued public school teacher Bliss P. Loy, 46, from her abductors in Barangay Moonwalk, Parañaque.

During the investigation, it turned out that the teacher was kidnapped to force her husband, Benjamin, to withdraw his candidacy as village chief in their hometown in Bucay, Abra, and that days before her abduction their house in the province was ransacked. 

Also on Wednesday, a 52-year-old candidate for barangay kagawad, Catalino Turalba, Sr., was killed by unidentified gunmen in Barangay Bangbangcag, also in Bucay. Prior to that on Oct. 9, a group of armed men shot it out with police in the same town.

To date, 122 candidates for the Oct. 30 elections have withdrawn their candidacies in Abra, with most of them from Bucay town, citing “pressure” from their rivals to back out. — Artemio A. Dumlao

House touts ‘clean’ audit record

PHILIPPINE STAR/ MICHAEL VARCAS

A PHILIPPINE congressman stressed on Thursday that the House of Representatives maintains a “clean audit standing,” expressing sadness over former president Rodrigo R. Duterte’s call to have the chamber audited as “the most rotten institution.”

“All that the House of Representatives has to submit, all that it has to liquidate, all of those are conducted and reported by the House of Representatives to the Commission on Audit (CoA),” House Majority Leader and Zamboanga Rep. Manuel Jose M. Dalipe said in a statement.

Speaking at an SMNI TV program, Mr. Duterte said in Filipino: “Let us not debate, just open the book, no more talk. Show us where the money is and how it is spent by all.”

“As per latest CoA report released only last Oct. 2, the House of Representatives has no disallowances… no notice of suspension and no notice of charge,” said House Secretary General Reginald S. Velasco in a recent statement.

Reacting to Mr. Duterte’s rant, Mr. Dalipe said in Filipino: “We all supported him — from the legislative agenda even during the time of the COVID-19 pandemic, whatever law or fund he needed, he was supported by Congress.”

Arjan P. Aguirre, who teaches political science at the Ateneo De Manila University, said this shows how Congress was a rubber stamp of the previous executive.

“The House of Representatives has always been known to be supportive of the ruling administration for access to government resources as they are controlled by a powerful president,” he said in a Facebook Messenger chat.

“Being part of the administration means having that access to huge funding which in turn can be used for patronage means. House members need this for their survival and eventual development as a more powerful political entity,” he added.

The House last week stripped several agencies including the Office of the Vice President and Education department, which Mr. Duterte’s daughter, Vice President Sara Duterte-Carpio heads, of their confidential funds, transferring P1.23 billion worth of these budgets to security agencies amid worsening tensions with China.

In response, Mr. Duterte described the chamber as the “most rotten institution” in the country. — Beatriz Marie D. Cruz

Ninja Van PHL expanding services beyond traditional last-mile delivery

Logistics company Ninja Van Philippines is expanding its services beyond last-mile delivery by introducing a wide range of logistics solutions, a company official said on Thursday. 

“We’re branching forth beyond the last-mile [delivery],” Jose Alvin Perez, country head of Ninja Van Philippines, told reporters during the company’s seventh-anniversary media tour and briefing in its hub in Cabuyao, Laguna. 

The company has introduced other services that provide additional value to its customers.

Such services include “Ninja Direct (procurement service), Ninja Fulfillment, Ninja Rewards, and account management,” Mr. Perez noted, adding that the company also intends to continue investing in new technology for its online dashboards like automated callouts. 

“We do have $50 million across the region to invest,” said Sabina Lopez-Vergara, chief commercial officer of Ninja Van Philippines. 

“We are also talking to a lot of digital platforms,” she added on optimizing cash collections given the persistent cash-on-delivery market in the country. 

The logistics company is optimistic about the growth and potential of the e-commerce market in the Philippines.  “There’s so much to figure out, especially in a country like the Philippines, sending parcels in different islands,” Mr. Perez said. 

The Philippines’ e-commerce sector is anticipated to jump by 2025, with gross merchandise value expected to reach $15 billion, according to an analyst from Franklin Templeton Emerging Markets Equity.

The country’s e-commerce market had an estimated gross merchandise value of $4 billion in 2020 when the coronavirus pandemic started to affect most industries.

Logistics in the Philippines has unique challenges due to its archipelagic nature, and this is where the company steps in, Mr. Perez noted. 

He said the company is “just starting to scratch the surface” of e-commerce in the Philippines. “We have yet to see significant business coming from outside Metro Manila.” 

The company is also dedicating resources to set up and enhance facilities all over the country, as it aims to serve a broader market and ensure that its services are accessible even in far-flung areas such as Tawi-Tawi.

“[We are] establishing delivery stations, and we will continue to expand. On the tech-driven solutions, the focus now is how to improve the experience of the sellers,” Mr. Perez said. 

Ninja Van opened its 21,000-square meter fully automated hub in Cabuyao, Laguna last year — its largest in Southeast Asia. With fully integrated measurement and sortation systems, its receiving and outbound capacities were boosted by 300% and 400%, respectively, according to the company. 

Group-wide, Ninja Van offers logistics solutions across Southeast Asia and operates in Singapore, Malaysia, the Philippines, Indonesia, Vietnam, and Thailand. — Miguel Hanz L. Antivola

New community-based women’s volleyball league kicks off Sunday

FREEPIK

A NEW league has dawned on the Philippine volleyball scene.

Eight pioneering women squads will slug it out in the inaugural Maharlika Pilipinas Volleyball Association (MPVA) this Sunday at Ynares Sports Center in Antipolo.

Like its sister tournament — the Maharlika Pilipinas Basketball League — the MPVA founded by former senator and world boxing icon Manny Pacquiao will have a home-and-away format to showcase the aspiring homegrown spikers and promote sports tourism of the country’s diverse regions.

Bacoor, Biñan, Caloocan, Marikina, Negros Oriental, Rizal, San Juan and Nasipit from Agusan Del Norte comprise the founding cast of the MPVA with Manila, Bulacan and Quezon City serving as prospective teams next season.

“This will be a fun community-based league featuring new and homegrown players” said MPVA Commissioner Mike Tavera during the opening presser on Wednesday at the Club Filipino in San Juan.

“We have a lot of volleyball talents not just in Metro Manila but all over the Philippines. There are a lot of outstanding players who do not have a platform. This is to showcase those talents not just here, but also all over the world,” added MPVA General Counsel Atty. Glen Gacal, joined by fellow counsel Atty. Victorina Calma and Operations Director Allen Reyes.

Aside from homegrown players, teams may also field collegiate bets, ex-professional cagers and Filipino-Foreign spikers to bolster their rosters as the upstart league attempts to cover another base from the ground up in Philippine volleyball.

Eight teams will figure in a single-round robin format for the elimination round before being split into two groups entering the playoffs, where the squads will duke it out once more to determine the final rankings for the quarterfinals.

Higher-ranked squads will sport twice-to-beat incentives in the quarterfinals until the semifinals and finals, both under best-of-three formats. A total of 64 matches in 29 days for the MPVA Season will be played featuring two to three games on Wednesdays, Thursdays, Saturdays and Sundays.

Rizal will host the opening weekend of the MPVA with a clash against San Juan in the main game at 6 p.m. after the duel between Caloocan and the visiting Negros at 3:30 p.m. — John Bryan Ulanday

San Beda Red Lions square off with San Sebastian Stags; CSB Blazers clash with EAC Generals

JOMEL PUNO — NCAA

Games Friday
(Filoil EcoOil Arena)
2 p.m. — CSB vs EAC
4 p.m. — San Beda vs San Sebastian

SAN BEDA University hopes to draw another inspiring performance from its second unit as it squares off with San Sebastian College-Recoletos today in NCAA Season 99 at the Filoil EcoOil Arena.

Fil-Canadian Jomel Puno should come in inspired after he came off the bench to spearhead the Red Lions’ dramatic 62-60 come-from-behind victory over the University of Perpetual Help Altas Tuesday.

Mr. Puno served as San Beda’s tree of life as he starred in his team’s most recent win.

There, he scored 12 points including five that came in late that went with 17 rebounds.

Fellow second stringers Nygel Gonzales and Emman Tagle likewise came through in helping Mr. Puno fill the void while their starters struggled.

“I was telling them that even the best players struggle so I’m happy the others stepped up,” said San Beda coach Yuri Escueta.

If the Red Lions, currently at No. 2 with a 5-2 mark, win again in their 4 p.m. match with the Stags (3-5), they will close the gap between them and the Mapua Cardinals, the league leaders with a 7-1 card.

Also getting help from his bench was College of St. Benilde (CSB) mentor Charles Tiu, who had to sit out starting big men Will Gozum — the reigning league MVP — and Miguel Corteza late to escape with a 72-66 triumph over Arellano University.

It was the Blazers’ third win in row and fourth overall against three setbacks.

They clash with the Emilio Aguinaldo College (EAC) Generals, also with a 4-3 mark, at 2 p.m. hoping to snatch a piece of No. 4 for the first time this season. “We’re improving,” said Mr. Tiu. — Joey Villar

Pasig faces Caloocan in North quarterfinals rubber match

IT’S win or go home for Pasig City MCW Sports on the road as it locks horns with host Caloocan in the deciding Game 3 of the 2023 Maharlika Pilipinas Basketball League (MPBL) North Division quarterfinals today at the Caloocan City Sports Complex.

Action erupts at 8 p.m. with the fourth-seeded Tropang Pasig looking to complete an upset of the No. 5 Batang Kankaloo for a seat in the semifinals against top-ranked Pampanga.

The team owned by Buddy Encarnado, after a heartbreaking 71-69 loss at the buzzer in Game 1, pulled off a 65-61 thriller of its own in Game 2 at the Caloocan’s turf to stay alive and kicking against all odds.

And on the road anew for Game 3, the homecourt-handicapped Tropang Pasig are keen on showcasing the same character and resiliency.

“I’d like to thank the boys for the win in Game 2. Hopefully, we’ll get another win in the next game but that’s not going to be easy work for us,” said coach Boyet Fernandez, who’s looking to weave his same magic in the MPBL after his success in the NCAA, PBA D-League and PBA.

“Caloocan is really a good team. It will be tough to play again in their home court. We’ll just have to be ready.”

After firing 23 points in the must-win Game 2, Robbie Manalang once again will spearhead Pasig’s stand against Caloocan bannered by a bevy of ex-PBA stalwarts with an expected coverage from Ryan Costelo, Kenny Roger Rocacurva, Jason Ballesteros and Josan Nimes.

Gabby Espinas, Mac Baracael, Paul Sanga, Reil Cervantes and Ronnie Matias of Caloocan will stand in their way.

Awaiting the survivor between Pasig and Caloocan as the only series to reach the distance, three squads have already booked their seats in the North Division Final Four led by reigning champion Nueva Ecija.

The Rice Vanguards swept No. 7 Pasay while No. 6 San Juan completed a stunning 2-0 series win over No. 3 Makati. Top-seed Pampanga also made short work of No. 8 Marikina. — John Bryan Ulanday

Taekwondo jin Ganapin guns for gold in Asian Para Games to renew Paralympic bid

ONE-ARMED TAEKWONDO Jin Alain Ganapin (left) with coach Gershon Bautista.

HANGZHOU — A casualty of the COVID-19 pandemic was one-armed taekwondo jin Alain Ganapin, whose bid to compete in the  Tokyo Paralympic Games in 2021 was derailed  after he was struck down by the virus just a few days before he was to go and see action in the Japanese capital.

That painful what-might-have-been experience was etched in the memory of the Marikina native, who vowed to work hard and rekindle his Olympic dream, no matter the cost and sacrifice required.

The grinding journey to the Paris Paralympic Games began in May 2022 when he ruled the men’s -70-kilogram division of the Asian Para Games Qualification Tournament held in Sharjah, the United Arab Emirates, punching a ticket to the 4th Hangzhou Asian Para Games.

Coach Gershon Bautista said that the athlete has not only been undergoing rigorous training the last three months at the Philippine Taekwondo Association Central Gym inside the Rizal Memorial Sports Complex, but also intense physical conditioning for this meet.    

“He (Ganapin) is better off now compared to three months ago,” Mr. Bautista noted of his tuneup matches with some of the able-bodied national team members, among them celebrated veteran and Southeast Asian Games champ Samuel Morrison.

“We believe he (Mr. Ganapin) has achieved a good fitness level for him to perform well in this Asian Para Games,” said the coach, adding that the athlete’s strength and stamina levels were at par before being stricken by the virus, if not better.

Proof that Mr. Ganapin was back in competitive shape was last July when he bagged a bronze  in the Australian Open, an Olympic ranking qualifying competition.

Hence, he will be killing two birds with one stone in achieving a podium finish in his debut here.   Mr. Bautista, who revealed that his ward is currently ranked No. 24 in the world ratings. “He has a bigger chance of making it to Paris if he is within the top 20 in the world because this event has more qualifying points.”

The country has never had a taekwondo jin competing in the Paralympic Games, and should everything go according to plan, Mr. Ganapin is keen on being the one by going all-out for golden glory at the 4th Hangzhou Asian Para Games here. — PSC

Chambers working with Tropang Giga in pre-season buildup

LEGENDARY import Sean Chambers is giving his friend and former teammate Jojo Lastimosa a helping hand in preparing TNT for the coming PBA Season 48 Commissioner’s Cup.

“I’m here to work with TNT…teach some of the young guys some of the things I learned about being a successful import, a successful player in the PBA,” Mr. Chambers said.

“There’s certain guidelines to being successful and you can’t short-change those. And I think for myself, those are the things I come and help teach and implement for the short stay that I’m here to help out with my favorite teammate of all time, Jojo Lastimosa.”

Mr. Chambers joined forces with Mr. Lastimosa at the fabled Alaska franchise in the 1990s, winning a rare grand slam together in 1996. The 1996 Governors’ Cup Best Import and Mr. 100 Percent Performance awardee saw action in the PBA from 1989 through 2001, winning six championships in all.

Despite his 6-foot-1 height,  Mr. Chambers was among the most effective post players during his prime — one aspect of the game he wants to impart on the Tropang Giga.

“Even with my size, I was pretty dynamite in the post game. So I want to come back and bring a little bit of the post game back to the PBA as things become more guard-oriented, a lot of pick-and-rolls,” Mr. Chambers, who’s now 58, said.

“But there’s something about being able to get a bucket when you need it in the crucial part of the game. So we want to try and bring that part back in the game as well.”

Mr. Chambers is in town for close to two weeks and is joined by another 1990s import, Derek Hamilton, in the TNT pre-season buildup. Mr. Hamilton suited up for Pepsi then led Alaska to a runner-up finish in the 1995 Commissioner’s Cup. — Olmin Leyba

Lionel Messi confirms he will not leave Inter Miami on loan

EXPRESSING a desire to spend the holidays at home with family, Inter Miami’s Lionel Messi confirmed earlier reports that he will not go out on loan this winter to an overseas club.

It has been a whirlwind calendar year for Messi, who started last season at Paris Saint-Germain in August 2022 and helped the club claim a Ligue 1 title before taking two months off and then arriving in the United States for his MLS debut in August.

Messi has one goal and two assists in five MLS regular-season matches (three starts) since joining Miami. In 13 games across all competitions for the club, Messi has 11 goals and eight assists.

Reported rumors had Messi possibly headed to the Saudi Pro League this winter or a potential return to his former club, FC Barcelona. Now, the only club match Messi has on his mind in the foreseeable future is Inter Miami’s season finale Saturday against Charlotte FC.

“I will train, I will play our upcoming match and I will try to get here (to the national team) in the best possible way for November,” Messi said in Spanish while on the field after Argentina defeated Peru 2-0 on Tuesday. “After that, I will enjoy the holidays in Argentina. It’s the first time that I am going to have more days off in December, with the holidays, with peace of mind, with my people.

“In January, I will return (to Miami) again to do preseason, start from scratch and prepare as best as possible as always.”

In November, defending World Cup champion Argentina has a pair of World Cup qualifiers against Uruguay and Brazil. Had Inter Miami made the playoffs, Messi could have been faced with continued tight scheduling if the club had been able to make a run to the MLS Cup final.

“It’s a shame,” Messi said about Miami not making the playoffs despite his best effort. “We came very close. I missed the last few games. We had several injuries. The month of July was very hard for us. We played every three days, we traveled. But we won a tournament, which is important for the club and for what is coming next year.” — Reuters

Neymar to have surgery after rupturing ACL, meniscus

NEYMAR will undergo surgery after rupturing the anterior cruciate ligament and meniscus in his left knee during a World Cup qualifier against Uruguay, Brazil’s FA said, an injury that is expected to sideline the forward for several months.

The 31-year-old went down after tussling for the ball with Uruguay’s Nicolas de la Cruz in the 44th minute of Brazil’s 2-0 defeat on Tuesday, holding his left leg in pain and calling for medical attention as his team mates looked on anxiously.

Neymar, who signed for Saudi Arabian side Al-Hilal in August, left the pitch in tears on a stretcher after receiving treatment for several minutes, and an MRI scan on Wednesday confirmed the injuries.

“The striker will undergo surgery, on a date yet to be set, to correct the injuries,” Brazil’s football confederation (CBF)said in a statement on Wednesday.

“The medical department of the Brazilian national team … and Al Hilal are in constant contact and are aligned in the athlete’s recovery.”

Neymar said he was frustrated to be sidelined with yet another injury so soon after recovering from an ankle operation.

Earlier this year, he underwent right ankle surgery that required months of recovery before he left Paris St Germain to sign a two year deal with Al-Hilal, where he had played only five games this season.

“It’s a very sad time, the worst,” he wrote onInstagram. “I know I’m strong, but this time I’m going to need my family and friends even more.

“It’s not easy to go through injury and surgery, imagine going through it all again after four months of recovery.”

Neymar’s career has been plagued with injuries. He spent three lengthy spells on the sidelines with his former club Paris St Germain after sustaining right foot injuries.

At the 2014 World Cup he suffered a back injury in the quarter-final victory over Colombia, ruling him out of the 7-1 semi-final defeat by Germany.

In 2018, injuries again hampered his dream of winning the World Cup. Early that year, Neymar suffered a sprained right ankle that affected the fifth metatarsal in his foot.

He missed 16 games for PSG at the end of the 2017-18 domestic season and was never fully fit as he played through the pain for Brazil in Russia until they were knocked out by Belgium in the quarter-finals.

The forward suffered similar injuries in 2019, 2021 and at last year’s Qatar World Cup.

The latest injury will be a bitter blow to Al-Hilal, who paid a reported 90 million euros ($95 million) for the forward.

The club are unbeaten in the Saudi Pro League and lead by one point, while they are also top of their AFC Champions League group after two games. — Reuters

Bad luck

When Liberty head coach Sandy Brondello called timeout with 8.8 seconds left in the match, she knew the Women’s National Basketball Association Finals was on the line. The seafoam and white were down a point, and she understood that failure to score in the last possession of yesterday’s set-to would all but invalidate the work they did en route. And so she drew up a play they had run to much success throughout their 2023 campaign. She called for an inbounds set that got Most Valuable Player awardee Breanna Stewart the ball on the right perimeter, and then hoped that their acknowledged leader would find magic once more.

As things turned out, Stewart proved unable to rise to the occasion. Even as she had five inches on series foil Alysha Clark, her attempt to back down on the reigning Sixth Person of The Year proved fruitless. By the time she reached the outer lane from the three-point line, close to six seconds had lapsed. Forced to scramble following a double team, she passed to Betnijah Laney, who, in the absence of a clear shot, then passed to Courtney Vandersloot in the left corner. The contest became history a hurried airball later, and the deafening silence from the 16,851 fans at the Barclays Center underscored the Liberty’s dismay at the final outcome.

In the post-mortem, Brondello doubled down on her assessment of the situation. She said she had Stewart effectively decide the outcome of Game Four — and, ultimately, the best-of-five affair — because she had full trust in the latter. And if she had a do-over, she contended, she would make the same decision. Never mind that the newly minted MVP had gone an atrocious three of 17 from the field to that point. Heck, even the recipient of her faith echoed her confidence in the midst of disappointment.

Indeed, the Liberty had all the chances to prevail, and couldn’t convert in part because of their offensive breakdowns. In larger measure, however, they were simply up against the superior Aces. Despite being hampered by the loss of point gawd Chelsea Gray, last year’s Finals MVP, and fellow starter Kiah Stokes, the red and black showed unshakable championship mettle and established esprit de corps from the get-go. Meanwhile, the hosts highlighted their relative lack of collective experience under pressure with either hurried shots or stagnant distribution that led to forced forays.

Make no mistake. The Liberty did extremely well to hand Gotham its first finals appearance since the turn of the millennium. That said, they still fell short of their stated objective following the most successful offseason recruitment binge in league history. And, as Vandersloot noted before members of the media, there can be no downplaying the hurt they felt. There are no moral victories, no justified reasons, no values excuses. There is only disappointment, even — and, perhaps, especially — in bowing to their betters.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and human resources management, corporate communications, and business development.

Disinformation surge threatens to fuel Israel-Hamas conflict

STOCK PHOTO | Image by memyselfaneye from Pixabay

AMSTERDAM/LONDON — As the Israel-Hamas war rages, regulators and analysts say a wave of online disinformation risks further inflaming passions and escalating the conflict in an electronic fog of war.

An explosion at a Gaza hospital that killed hundreds of Palestinians on Tuesday is the latest focus of the surge of activity as supporters of both sides in the battle between Israel and Hamas try to bolster their own side’s narrative and cast doubts on the other’s.

US President Joseph R. Biden referred to the challenge of verifying information during the conflict in remarks about the hospital blast on a visit to Israel on Wednesday, saying responsibility for the incident appeared to lie with Israel’s adversaries.

“But there’s a lot of people out there not sure, so we’ve got to overcome a lot of things,” Mr. Biden said.

Reuters fact-checking unit has identified numerous cases of social media posts using fake images and information about the Israel-Hamas conflict, and others in which confusion rather than deliberate disinformation appears to have heightened tensions.

These include:

• An X account under the name Farida Khan claiming to be an Al Jazeera journalist in Gaza posted a message saying they had a video of a “Hamas missile landing in the hospital” in Tuesday’s incident. Al Jazeera subsequently alerted social media users that the account had no ties to the news service. Al Jazeera told Reuters it does not employ a person with the name Farida Khan. The account was later removed.

• A video of Russian President Vladimir Putin speaking about Ukraine last year was shared this month with fabricated subtitles warning the US not to interfere in the Israel-Hamas conflict.

• Amid genuine images showing dead bodies of those killed by Hamas on Oct. 7, a 2015 video of the lynching of a 16-year-old girl in Guatemala has been misrepresented online as showing a young Israeli woman being burnt by a “Palestinian mob.”

• After receiving online criticism about blue and white flags used in her act, the pop singer Pink posted a tweet saying: “I am getting many threats because people mistakenly believe I am flying Israeli flags in my show. I am not.

“I have been using Poi flags since the beginning of this tour. These were used many, many years ago by the Maori people in New Zealand.”

REAL-WORLD CONSEQUENCES
Heightened tensions can have real-world consequences beyond the Israeli towns and kibbutzes where 1,400 Israelis were killed by Hamas gunmen on Oct. 7, and in Gaza, where more than 3,000 Palestinians have been killed so far by Israel’s retaliatory bombardment.

France has been put on its highest security alert after a teacher was killed in an Islamist attack and bomb alerts forced the evacuation of the Louvre Museum. Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin said the attack bore a link to events in the Middle East.

In Illinois a landlord was charged with hate crimes, accused of stabbing a 6-year-old Palestinian American boy to death and wounding his mother, who were his tenants. The sheriff’s office said they were “targeted by the suspect due to them being Muslim and the on-going Middle Eastern conflict involving Hamas and the Israelis.”

Jewish schools in London closed over the weekend after a Jewish charity that provides security recorded an increase of 400% in antisemitic incidents since the attacks when compared to the same period last year.

In modern conflicts, across the globe as well as in the Middle East, warring sides have long used television — and more recently the internet — to win the war for hearts and minds as well as the war on the ground, often mixing truth with fiction.

Regulators are watching. The European Union’s industry chief Thierry Breton called out X, Facebook parent company Meta, TikTok and YouTube for not doing enough to curb disinformation following the attacks. Each company has said they have taken steps to address harmful content.

Since Oct. 7 the Cyber Unit at Israelís Office of the State Attorney has begun to work to remove content on social networks that distribute content which, they say, incites violence associated with Hamas.

The Israeli prosecutor’s office said it has submitted about 4,450 requests to remove content, according to the following division, most of them to Facebook, TikTok and X, formerly known as Twitter.

Rafi Mendelsohn, a vice-president of the Israeli bot-monitoring firm Cyabra, said more than 40,000 fake accounts have pushed pro-Hamas narratives online, and thousands of them were created more than a year before the attack.

“The scale suggests there was pre-prepared content and manpower into getting it out. We haven’t seen such sophistication with a militant group,” he told Reuters.

TWO NARRATIVES
Some accounts also seem to be involved in pushing out falsehoods, targeting Palestinians and Middle East countries perceived to be pro-Palestinian.

In 2014 the spokesman for Hamas’s military wing, Abu Obaidah, posted a video acknowledging Iranian support for Hamas. In recent days that was reposted online and misrepresented as being recent, to directly implicate Tehran in the latest attack.

And while Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan has been critical of Israel’s blockade of Gaza, incorrect subtitles were added to a viral video that circulated on X and Facebook in recent days warning the US not to intervene and that Turkey was “ready to defend Palestine at any price.”

Marc Owen Jones, a disinformation expert and professor at Hamad bin Khalifa University in Qatar, said there was often a rise in disinformation during conflicts.

“I think Hamas are sending mixed messages. On the one hand, videos of attacks that are obviously brutal, on the other, some attempts to try and deflect that with stories about being humane. Clearly, they seem directed at different audiences, but the combined effect is to muddy the waters about the truth in the conflict,” he said.

Similarly, he said, anti-Palestinian narratives included claims that Palestinians were staging injuries and deaths with “crisis actors.”

“It is also designed to muddy the waters and paint Palestinians as dishonest — while making people doubt whether the images, they see of Palestinian suffering are genuine.” — Reuter