IANS Falls for Satire; Claims Imran Read COVID Curve Upside Down

The report is a work of satire published in a Pakistan-based website - The Dependent.
Himanshi Dahiya
WebQoof
Updated:
News wire agency India Asian News Service (IANS) passed off a piece of satire as actual news.
|
(Photo: Altered by The Quint)
News wire agency India Asian News Service (IANS)  passed off a piece of satire as actual news.
ADVERTISEMENT

News agency India Asian News Service (IANS) on Thursday, 7 May, passed off a piece of satire as actual news. The wire agency published an article with the headline “Imran Khan Reads Chart Upside Down, Claims COVID Curve Flattening” was later picked by several other news websites.

The report originally appeared on a Pakistan-based satirical website – The Dependent.

THE CLAIM

Several news organisations including Sahara Samay, DT Next, and Newsd published a report claiming “Pakistan’s Prime Minister Imran Khan has made a gaffe claiming that the COVID-19 curve has been flattening in Pakistan. The faux pas happened because he was reading the chart upside down.”

An archived version of the report can be accessed here.
An archived version of the report can be accessed here.
An archived version of the post can be accessed here

The report was also picked and published by multiple pages on Facebook.

An archived version of the post can be accessed here.
An archived version of the post can be accessed here.

WHAT WE FOUND

On conducting a TweetDeck search using terms “Imran Khan claims COVID curve flattening” we came across a tweet by a Twitter handle Not The Dependent, which carried a screenshot of the original IANS article by journalist Aarti Tikoo Singh. The Tweet claimed that the source article is a work of satire.

Taking cues from here we ran a Google keyword search and found the same report on a Pakistani website The Dependent with a satire stamp.

An archived version of the report can be accessed here.

The Dependent is a satire website based out of Pakistan.

Clearly, a work of satire was passed off as real news by IANS. The writer of the IANS story, Aarti Tikoo Singh, later issued a clarification.

This is not the first time when IANS was caught spreading misinformation. The news agency has been called out for publishing misleading content at various occasions in the past.

You can read all our coronavirus fact-checks here.

(Not convinced of a post or information you came across online and want it verified? Send us the details on WhatsApp at 9643651818, or e-mail it to us at webqoof@thequint.com and we'll fact-check it for you. You can also read all our fact-checked stories here.)

(At The Quint, we are answerable only to our audience. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member. Because the truth is worth it.)

Published: 08 May 2020,12:17 PM IST

ADVERTISEMENT
SCROLL FOR NEXT