Indonesian Road Viral as PM Modi’s Infrastructural Push in India

The photos are from an Indonesian village where residents had seen an asphalt road for the first time.
Pooja Chaudhuri
WebQoof
Published:
The photos are from an Indonesian village where residents had seen an asphalt road for the first time.
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(Photo: Altered by The Quint)
The photos are from an Indonesian village where residents had seen an asphalt road for the first time.
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Twitter user Pawan Durani tweeted in the morning of November 29 images of a road and claimed that it was newly constructed in a village, courtesy Prime Minister Narendra Modi. In the photographs, children can be seen playing on the road barefoot. Durani, who is followed by PM Modi, later deleted his tweet. However, it had already received over 5,000 likes and 2,000 retweets.

A screenshot of Durani’s tweet was widely circulated by several right-wing pages on Facebook, inculuding fake news purveyor Post Card Fans.

Other pages that shared the tweet were My Prime Minister – Modi, We Support Sangh Parivar and Narendra Modi Fans : Karnataka. The identical claim was also circulated by individual users.

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Image From Indonesia

Alt News reverse-searched the images and found that they were of an Indonesian village where the residents had seen an asphalt road for the first time in their lives. In an article published on October 15, 2018, website The Quebec Times shared the photographs.

The same images were also circulated by other websites in October – 1, 2, 3. However, Alt News could trace them as far back as August 2018. They were shared by a popular Indonesian website brilio.net, which credited the images to Twitter handle @gothed. The user had tweeted the photographs on August 27, 2018.

It is commonplace on social media for infrastructural developments of other countries to be attributed to the Indian government. Recently, Ahmedabad Mayor Bijal Patel tweeted an image from Seoul as Sabarmati Riverfront in Ahmedabad. Earlier, an image of Nanpu Bridge from Shanghai was posted as Varanasi roads on social media. Last year, Chhattisgarh PWD minister Rajesh Munat passed off a Vietnamese bridge as one in Raigarh; a digital impression of Rajkot Bus stand was circulated by many as the real image; the Ministry of Roads, Transport and Highways posted pictures of roadways from US and Canada on its parivahan website. Even the Aam Aadmi Party had recently passed off a bridge in the Netherlands as Signature bridge in Delhi.

(This article was first published on AltNews and has been republished with permission.)

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