Άλλος κτηνάνθρωπος εδώ πέρα. Δεν πήρε χαμπάρι τις φωτογραφίες με το νεκρό κοριτσάκι που έδειχναν χθες όλα τα ΜΜΕ.
Σπούδαζε κι'αυτός σαν το Χριστόδουλο.
ή ίσως κάποιος που δεν είναι μισθοφόρος, ώστε να αναπαράγει φωτογραφίες που δεν γνωρίζει αν είναι αληθινές, κι ότι ΙΣΩΣ αποδειχτούν ψεύτικες αργότερα, χωρίς τα ΜΜΕ να κάνουν τον κόπο να ζητήσουν συγνώμη.
Και για να μαθαίνεις. Η usatoday αφιέρωσε ένα άρθρο, στους ψεύτικους θανάτους των πατεράδων παιδιών.
The claim: Photo shows child whose parents died in the war in Ukraine
In the three weeks since Russian troops invaded Ukraine,
nearly 100 Ukrainian children have died. Heart-rending images of displaced children and their parents have filled social media feeds.
One of those photos, of a disheveled toddler standing amid debris, was shared more than 300 times in a week
since being posted March 10 on Facebook.
"Pray for this little child. Parents killed in Ukraine war," the post's caption reads.
The image also accumulated nearly 1,000 shares in a week on
a number of other
Facebook accounts.
But
the photo is not from Russia's recent invasion into Ukraine; it's from a 2015 video.
While many individuals commenting on the post offered prayerful words and support for the child, some questioned its authenticity. One user said, "Fake, this photo is not Russia - Ukraine war." Another said, "This is not Ukraine, somewhere else."
USA TODAY reached out to the user who shared the claim for comment.
The image is from Ukraine seven years ago
The image is taken from the 50-second mark of a music video uploaded to
YouTube in 2015. It's title is
“Angel: A Song about the Children of Donbas,” according to Google Translate.
The Donbas region has been in conflict since 2014. After parts of eastern Ukraine
voted in a referendum to separate from Ukraine,
portions of Donetsk and Luhansk were left with Russian-backed separatists.
The image has been taken out of context and
attached to other humanitarian crises, as
other fact-check organizations have reported
While the image of the toddler is from Ukraine, it's not from the current conflict. It comes from a 2015 music video.
eu.usatoday.com