France accuses Azerbaijan of meddling in New Caledonia with social media
campaign
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[May 18, 2024]
PARIS (Reuters) - France accused Azerbaijan on Friday of
fanning the flames of riots in the French-ruled Pacific island of New
Caledonia by flooding social media with what it said were misleading
photos and videos targeting French police.
Paris has cracked down on rioters who are angry over a contested
electoral reform and is trying to restore order in the remote overseas
territory after three nights of upheaval in which four people have been
killed.
The French government's watchdog for online disinformation campaigns,
Viginum, a unit created in response to Russian activity in Africa,
published a report on Friday identifying Azeri social media accounts
spreading anti-French propaganda.
French Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin first levelled the charges
against Azerbaijan on Thursday, without providing any evidence.
Azerbaijan's foreign ministry swiftly denied what it called insulting
allegations and reiterated on Friday it was not connected to the New
Caledonia protests.
"Instead of accusing Azerbaijan of allegedly supporting pro-independence
protests in New Caledonia, France should focus on his country’s failed
policy towards the overseas territories that led to such protests. We
once again call on France to stop baseless claims against our country,"
said Foreign Ministry spokesman Aykhan Hajiyev.
Viginum said the campaign included a picture montage showing dead
pro-independence protesters next to a white man in a khaki outfit with a
rifle held in a shooting position, with the caption: "The French police
are murderers".
Viginum said at least 86 posts on social media platform X, formerly
Twitter, were published by profiles of people who list a connection to
the Azeri ruling presidential party YAP. They used the hashtags #RecognizeNewCaledonia
and #FrenchColonialism.
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A road is barricaded by rioters as they protest against plans to
allow more people to take part in local elections in the
French-ruled territory, which indigenous Kanak protesters reject, in
Noumea, New Caledonia, May 15, 2024, in this picture obtained from
social media. Lilou Garrido Navarro Kherachi/via REUTERS /File Photo
"On May 15 and 16, Viginum has detected on X and Facebook a massive
and coordinated spread of content manifestly inaccurate and
misleading accusing French police of killing pro-independence
protesters in New Caledonia," the report said.
It published screenshots of the accounts and a minute-by-minute
account of the posts.
Azerbaijan has reacted angrily to French military support for
Armenia, another republic in the South Caucasus with which it has
fought two wars in the past three decades.
Azerbaijan last year recaptured the Karabakh region, where ethnic
Armenians had enjoyed de facto independence since the early 1990s.
France, which has a large ethnic Armenian community, has been
sympathetic towards Armenia and provided military equipment. It
asked Baku for clarification in November about a campaign that
targeted the Olympic Games.
According to officials the campaign in New Caledonia has been in the
works for several months and has even seen Azerbaijan organize
anti-French networks on the ground, including through the financing
of events.
"Azerbaijan is outsourcing its dispute (with France)," a French
source with knowledge of the government's view told Reuters.
(Reporting by Michel Rose and John Irish; editing by Richard Lough
and Cynthia Osterman)
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