Misinformation about the latest Israel-Hamas war is thriving on social media platforms, where misrepresented video footage, mistranslations and outright falsehoods often crowd out real reporting from the conflict.
In recent weeks, users have pushed false claims that of carnage and that to fight on the ground in Gaza.
Here is a closer look at the latest misinformation spreading online 鈥 and the facts.
___
CLAIM: A video shows a Palestinian 鈥渃risis actor鈥 removing his bandages to show his worried mother that his injuries aren鈥檛 real.
THE FACTS: The man鈥檚 injuries are real. Arabic-language experts and the Palestinian journalist who captured the emotional exchange on video say the injured man and others surrounding him were trying to calm the woman, who believed her son had been mortally wounded in an attack during the Israel-Hamas war.
The viral video shows a man sitting on a hospital bed with a large, bloodied bandage wrapped around his head while wearing a blood-soaked t-shirt and tattered pants.
The man appears to have other injuries on his arms and face as he and the men around him speak animatedly to the visibly emotional woman. At one point, one of the men unwraps the bandage over the bedridden man鈥檚 head to show the woman the extent of injuries underneath.
鈥淭his is gold. A Palestinian mother sees images online showing her son injured. She races to the hospital only to find it鈥檚 all fake,鈥 one Instagram user who shared the brief clip wrote in a post that鈥檚 been liked more than 11,000 times as of Monday. 鈥淗e is fine, it鈥檚 just an act mommy. It鈥檚 called Pallywood. Sad so many are being manipulated.鈥
But the unidentified man is not faking his injuries. Both he and the men standing by his bedside are simply trying to calm the woman.
Taoufik Ben-Amor, a senior lecturer in Arabic studies at Columbia University in New York, confirmed the men are trying to assure the woman that the injuries are not that serious and that her son will be fine.
鈥淎n act of trying to protect the mother from grief,鈥 he wrote in an email.
Nasr Abdo, who is also a lecturer at Columbia University, agreed, after reviewing the video.
鈥淭his is a very cultural thing, people and the injured patient are trying to calm the mother down by saying that he is fine and not badly injured,鈥 he wrote in an email. 鈥淏ut there is no indication at all that this is acting. It鈥檚 just the way in Arabic saying he is going to be fine.鈥
Mohmmed Awad, a Palestinian journalist who filmed the video, didn鈥檛 respond to messages seeking comment this week, but he , a Palestinian fact checking website, a similar explanation.
Awad, who of the fact check story on Instagram, said the incident happened last week at the Nasser Medical Hospital in Khan Yunis, a city in southern Gaza.
He said the woman came into the hospital screaming, so he followed her to the intensive care unit where her son was being treated for a head injury.
鈥淪he thought he was martyred,鈥 Awad told the organization in Arabic. 鈥淚n the video, they were just reassuring her that her son is okay. Even the injured young man sat up and took the bandage off his head to tell her he was okay.鈥
鈥 Associated Press writer Philip Marcelo in New York and editor Nadia Ahmed in London contributed this report.
___
CLAIM: A video of wall-to-wall crowds in Madrid鈥檚 Puerta del Sol plaza shows a protest supporting Palestinians.
THE FACTS: The protest seen in has nothing to do with the conflict in the Middle East. The footage was featured by a Spanish news outlet in coverage of on Sunday opposing a deal that amnesty to Catalan separatists in exchange for their support of a new coalition government in Spain.
Some on social media are misrepresenting footage of the unrelated protest as a response to the .
The video pans from left to right and back again, showing people crowded into Puerta del Sol, many of whom are holding Spanish flags, as an amplified voice can be heard echoing across the plaza.
It was shot from the top of La Real Casa de Correos, a former post office that is now a regional government building, as evidenced by atop the building鈥檚 clock tower that is visible in the footage.
鈥淪pain today,鈥 reads one post on X, formerly Twitter, that shared the video. 鈥淔rom the river to the sea Palestine will be free,鈥 it continued, echoing at pro-Palestinian rallies. The post was shared more than 7,400 times.
There in Spain supporting Palestinians in Gaza. But currently spreading online shows people demonstrating against made by Spain鈥檚 acting prime minister with Catalan separatists.
The same video by Spanish news outlet El Mundo in its coverage of protests against the amnesty deal.
El Mundo confirmed in an email that it shows people protesting over the domestic political issue, not the war. The outlet said the video came from the government of the Community of Madrid, which is headquartered in La Real Casa de Correos.
Multiple time-specific details from the footage are also present in of the same event. For example, a white van is parked next to a statue of Carlos III, an 18th century Spanish king. A metal Christmas tree in the process of in the plaza is missing the same chunk of beams. And the same tall black speakers poke out of the crowd.
, the protest was called by Spain鈥檚 Conservative Popular Party in response to a deal the country鈥檚 Socialist Party struck with a Catalan separatist group that wants independence for the northeastern region of Catalonia. It was made in exchange for the separatists鈥 support in reelecting acting Prime Minister Pedro S谩nchez following an inconclusive election in July.
Part of the deal includes amnesty for Carles Puigdemont, a Catalan leader who fled Spain after leading a failed illegal secession bid in 2017, and thousands of other secessionists.
鈥 Associated Press writer Melissa Goldin in New York contributed this report.
___
CLAIM: A video shows a makeup artist applying dirt and fake blood to a young girl on a stretcher, proving that people in Gaza are faking injuries in the
THE FACTS: The video is behind-the-scenes footage from a short film made in Lebanon, and was not made to mislead people, the director confirmed to The Associated Press.
In recent weeks, social media users have repeatedly misrepresented videos to falsely accuse Palestinians of being 鈥渃risis actors鈥 in the war, as part of a conspiracy theory dubbed 鈥淧allywood.鈥
In the latest example, people are sharing a clip that begins with a child who appears to be wounded being treated on a stretcher as protesters wave Palestinian flags. As the video goes on, however, a makeup artist can be seen applying makeup to the girl to depict blood and wounds, and the child smiles at the camera.
The video was shared on multiple social media platforms including X, formerly known as Twitter, claiming it shows how Palestinians 鈥渇ake injuries.鈥
鈥淭he Palestinians are fooling the international media and public opinion. DON鈥橳 FALL FOR IT,鈥 reads one post on X, which garnered more than 10,000 likes. 鈥淧allywood gets busted again.鈥
However, the video is actually behind-the-scenes footage of a short film. The director, Mahmoud Ramzi, first uploaded the actual film, 鈥 ,鈥 to his Instagram account on Oct. 28 The movie is clearly not intended to look like real footage of the conflict.
Ramzi confirmed to The Associated Press that the short film was shot in Lebanon and said it was to show the 鈥減ain that Gaza鈥檚 people endured.鈥
鈥淚t was not filmed to mislead people or to fabricate any truth, because what鈥檚 happening in gaza don鈥檛 need any form of fabrication, the videos are all over the media,鈥 Ramzi wrote in an Instagram message.
The was posted to Instagram on Oct. 29 by an actor, Rami Jardali. 鈥淏ackstage Reality,鈥 reads a translated version of the caption on Instagram.
Ramzi also on his Instagram story refuting the false claims. The video states the film shows 鈥渢he suffering of the people in Gaza, but in an artistic way.鈥
鈥 Associated Press writer Karena Phan in Los Angeles contributed this report.
___
CLAIM: A collage of nine images features the same Palestinian 鈥渃risis actor鈥 pretending to be a wounded patient, a dead body and others in the ongoing .
THE FACTS: Not all the photos show the same man. The person who appears to be pretending to be a dead war victim is actually a Thai child last year. The wounded patient a 16-year old Palestinian boy who lost a leg in the West Bank over the summer.
Social media users are claiming the collage proves Palestinians are faking the gravity of the situation in Gaza.
Most of the nine pictures in the post show a man dressed in different outfits, with captions ranging from 鈥渇reedom fighter鈥 to 鈥淎merican idol.鈥
At the center of the collage is an image of a person wrapped head-to-toe in a white sheet but seated upright and looking at a phone in their hands. The text on the photo reads 鈥渞evived corpse.鈥
The image to the left of it shows a man with eyes closed laying on a hospital gurney with electronic sensors attached to his bare chest as medical staff attend to him. The text on that photo reads, 鈥淩esilient patient.鈥
鈥淭his is a misinformation war. Make no mistake about it. The propaganda is real,鈥 wrote one Instagram user who shared the collage. 鈥淎sk yourself: why do they need? #Pallywood #Gaza #FreePalestine from #Hamas.鈥
But not all of the photos in the montage show the same person.
For example, the photo of the 鈥渞evived corpse鈥 was on Oct. 29, 2022, on Facebook by a woman in Thailand.
The post included of her two sons dressed as dead people for Halloween. A local news outlet also shared the mother鈥檚 photos on Facebook, noting that the pair took third place in a shopping mall costume contest in Nakhon Ratchasima, a major city in the country鈥檚 northeast.
As to the image of the 鈥渞esilient patient鈥 in the collage, a photo of a Palestinian teen injured months before the latest war with Israel erupted in early October.
Mohammed Zendiq, 16, had his leg amputated following July clashes at a refugee camp in the West Bank, according to an Aug. 25 from the International Solidarity Movement, a Palestinian-led group.
Other photos in the collage depict a young Palestinian man named Saleh Aljafarawi.
The Gaza resident, who didn鈥檛 respond to messages seeking comment, describes himself as an artist on his and has been regularly posting images and videos of himself amid the ongoing war on his , Instagram and other social media accounts.
鈥 Philip Marcelo.
___
CLAIM: A video shows a soldier being thrown to the ground as an airstrike hits an Israeli tank.
THE FACTS: The imagery is computer generated and was taken for a video game called Squad.
The video, which is circulating on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter, appears to show a soldier walking among military vehicles. As an armored vehicle comes up on his left, he waves his hand and says, 鈥淟et him through,鈥 before an airstrike hits the vehicle and the soldier is thrown to the ground.
One user shared the video with the caption, 鈥淭he scene of the destruction of an Israeli tank in the attack of Hamas鈥︹
Another post on X of the same video with a similar caption in Urdu had more than 18,000 likes.
But the clip is identical to the released for an update to the first-person shooter game Squad in December 2022.
Offworld Industries, the game developer that makes Squad, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
This is not the first time clips of video game footage have been misrepresented as a real-life war. Video of the military simulation game Arma 3 has been shared as both as well as .
鈥 Karena Phan.
___
CLAIM: Pro-Palestinian rallies at the University of California, Los Angeles, and the University of Pennsylvania called for 鈥淛ewish genocide.鈥
THE FACTS: The chant uttered in videos of recent demonstrations is being misrepresented. Protestors aren鈥檛 saying 鈥淲e want Jewish genocide,鈥 but 鈥淚srael, we charge you with genocide.鈥 Experts and advocates say it鈥檚 a typical refrain heard at pro-Palestinian rallies.
One video being miscaptioned shows a group of people chanting protest slogans as they marched through the UCLA campus.
鈥淚n UCLA hundreds of students chanting: 鈥業srael Israel you can鈥檛 hide, we want Jewish genocide鈥,鈥 wrote one Instagram user in a post sharing the video. 鈥淭his is not 1930s Germany, this is in Los Angeles October 26th 2023!鈥
Another video captures similar sounding protest chants at Penn鈥檚 campus in Philadelphia on Oct. 16.
鈥淪tudents @uofpenn gathered chanting 鈥榃e want Jewish genocide鈥 鈥榯here is only 1 solution鈥 in reference to the Nazis 鈥榝inal solution鈥,鈥 wrote an Instagram user who shared the clip in a post. 鈥淭here has possibly never ever been a more dangerous time to be a Jewish student as Antisemitism continues to grow as a disease.鈥
But the anti-Israel chants are being misquoted, Jewish and pro-Palestinian groups say.
The protestors are actually chanting, 鈥淚srael, Israel, you can鈥檛 hide: We charge you with genocide,鈥 the Anti-Defamation League, which frequently speaks out against anti-Semitism and extremism, confirmed in an Oct. 31 email.
It鈥檚 a familiar refrain at anti-Israel rallies, but non-Israel-related versions are also heard at other protests, the New York-based Jewish group noted on a page on its about the ongoing conflict.
Penn Students Against the Occupation, which organized the Penn rally, dismissed the claims as 鈥渂latant disinformation鈥 in a statement .
The chants at UCLA were similarly misquoted, the university said on a related to campus events.
Dan Gold, who heads Hillel UCLA, a major Jewish organization on campus, noted his organization the rally for its harmful rhetoric in its public statements.
But he personally observed the protest and confirmed there was no direct call to exterminate Jews.
鈥 Philip Marcelo.
__
This is part of AP鈥檚 effort to address widely shared misinformation, including work with outside companies and organizations to add factual context to misleading content that is circulating online. .