Belarusian KGB set up fake social media accounts to inflame migrant
crisis, Meta says
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[December 02, 2021]
By Matthias Williams
KYIV (Reuters) - Facebook's parent company
Meta has linked the Belarusian KGB to the setting up of dozens of fake
social media accounts of people posing as journalists and activists to
stir up a migrant crisis on the border of Belarus and Poland.
A Meta report on Wednesday said it had removed 41 Facebook accounts,
five Facebook Groups and four Instagram accounts for violating its
policy on "coordinated inauthentic behaviour".
The fake profiles were used to criticise the behaviour of the Polish
authorities, including spreading allegations that Polish border guards
were using force and intimidation against migrants, it said.
"These fictitious personas posted criticism of Poland in English,
Polish, and Kurdish, including pictures and videos about Polish border
guards allegedly violating migrants' rights, and compared Poland's
treatment of migrants against other countries'," the report said.
"Although the people behind it attempted to conceal their identities and
coordination, our investigation found links to the Belarusian KGB," it
said.
The Belarusian KGB could not be reached for comment.
Facebook has been under global pressure from regulators, lawmakers and
employees to combat abuses on its services. It told Reuters in September
that it was being more aggressive in shutting down coordinated groups of
real-user accounts engaging in certain harmful activities on its
platform, including attempts to influence elections in countries.
European Union countries have accused Belarus of
creating a migrant crisis on the bloc's eastern borders by encouraging
thousands from the Middle East and Africa to try to cross into Poland
and Lithuania, in revenge for Western sanctions on Minsk.
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Woman holds smartphone with Facebook logo in front of Facebook's new
rebrand logo Meta in this illustration picture taken October 28,
2021. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/File Photo
Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko denies doing so and pinned
the blame for the crisis on the EU.
Rights groups say at least 13 people have died as migrants have
camped in freezing conditions at the border. The three EU countries
that border Belarus have defended their approach of pushing migrants
back without individually assessing their cases or granting them a
realistic chance to claim asylum as guaranteed under international
humanitarian law.
The Meta report said the company separately had removed 31 Facebook
accounts, four Groups and four Instagram accounts that were believed
to have originated in Poland and targeted an audience in Belarus and
Iraq.
The report did not link the accounts to the Polish state but said
they were intended to discourage migrants from trying to get into
the EU.
"These fake personas claimed to be sharing their own negative
experiences of trying to get from Belarus to Poland and posted about
migrants' difficult lives in Europe," it said. "They also posted
about Poland's strict anti-migrant policies and anti-migrant
neo-Nazi activity in Poland."
(Additional reporting by Pavel Polityuk; Editing by Bernadette Baum)
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