Site icon News-EN

Photos of dog meat busts in Angola wrongly linked to anti-immigrant rhetoric in South Africa

a9afa9ec039c569376d9677fcd37f4c2


A blurry screenshot of the fake X-post, taken on September 4, 2024

The post had garnered hundreds of likes before the X account was suspended.

The claim circulated in several languages ​​in other countries on the continent, including Guinea And Ugandaand was adapted to fit local anti-immigration narratives.

But AFP Fact Check found the claims to be false.

Angola 2023

A reverse image search allowed us to trace the photos back to 2023 articles about a bust in Angola (archived here).

One of the women in the circulating photos wears a traditional blue-green wrap skirt that matches the pattern and material of a suspect photographed at the scene of the police operation in 2023.

A blurry screenshot from the December 2023 article showing photos showing the woman’s skirt

The blue bin and the plastic crate also match each other.

Portuguese media reported that the Angolan Criminal Investigation Service arrested a group on December 14, 2023, for selling dog meat to customers who thought they were buying goat meat (archived here).

Two of the suspects are believed to be undocumented citizens, originally from the Democratic Republic of Congo.

The Angolan reports identify all three individuals and their names do not match those in the false reports circulating online.

Further online research revealed that the same claim has been made before. circulating on X since at least December 2023.

Anti-immigrant sentiment

South Africa attracts many economic migrants from elsewhere on the continent, despite having one of the highest in the world. unemployment rates (archived here).

The influx, coupled with a bleak economic outlook, has led to a rise in xenophobia – often directed at Nigerians – and sporadic eruptions of anti-immigrant violence in recent years (archived here).

Growing anti-foreigner sentiment in South Africa has unleashed a wave of disinformation online

LUCA WITHOUTAFP

Tensions rose further after a recent row with a Miss South Africa 2024 finalist with Nigerian ties (archived here).

Chidimma Adetshina’s Nigerian heritage sparked fierce xenophobic attacks when she was announced as a finalist for the pageant in July, while the government announced it was investigating a claim that her mother may have stolen the identity of a South African woman.

Adetshina eventually withdrew from the competition and was instead crowned the winner of Miss Universe Nigeria.

Another recent incident has left Johannesburg’s newly appointed mayor, Dada Morero, in hot water over suggest that foreigners should be hired as police officers (archived here).

AFP has debunked several false claims about immigrants in South Africa, including: here And here.

Exit mobile version