Saudi smear campaign targets Al Jazeera journalists
Thousands of well known and verified Saudi Twitter accounts
have launched a smear campaign against two prominent Al Jazeera journalists,
Ola Fares and Ghada Oueiss.
Marc Owen Jones, a social media analyst and professor of
Middle East Studies at Doha's Hamad bin Khalifa University, revealed in a
thread on Twitter that over 25,000 tweets, retweets and replies were aimed at
the journalists within a 24-hour period.
"What we are seeing now is a new modus operandi. This
started in earnest in May, when they created a fake story about a coup. The
accounts doctored tweets, doctored videos and created entirely artificial
content," Jones said to MEE.
"This tactic has been the same as this recent case,
which was premised on a fake tweet."
According to research conducted by Jones, the journalists
were an easy target because they are women, and as a result received thousands
of misogynistic comments.
"The Twitter accounts had hacked or stolen content from
Ghada's phone of her in a bikini in a jacuzzi that allowed them to create a
salacious fake backstory," he said.
Ouweiss and Fares examine sensitive issues such as women's
rights and the assassination of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, which,
according to Jones, might be the reason why they have been targeted with a
smear campaign.
Earlier this year, a Saudi-led disinformation campaign using
various accounts and influencers was used to spread information about an
alleged coup in Qatar.
A number of influential accounts with large followings were
part of the smear campaign, including accounts that shared private images of
Oueiss and suggestive accusations of how the journalists got to their
positions.
One influential Saudi Twitter user and author, Ibrahim
al-Sulaiman, was involved in the campaign and used the hashtags #غاده_جاكوزي #علا_فارس
to criticise the journalists in a series of tweets.
According to Jones, accounts with Saudi flags in their names
tweeted innuendos about Oueiss. One tweet that featured Oueiss' name in a
hashtag showed an image of someone overdosing on drugs.
Agnes Callamard, the United Nations special rapporteur,
called on Twitter to take action against the harassment campaign launched at
the journalists.
Jones, who has written extensively about Saudi
disinformation networks, has called for further investigations into “digital
predators”.
In April, Twitter deleted thousands of accounts that were
used to spread propaganda on behalf of Saudi Arabia and Egypt.
The social media giant said in a post on its platform that
it deleted 5,350 accounts from Saudi Arabia for "amplifying content
praising Saudi leadership, and critical of Qatar and Turkish activity in
Yemen".
It said the Saudi-linked accounts were being run out of the
kingdom and the United Arab Emirates, where Twitter's Middle East headquarters
is based, as well as Egypt.
Twitter said it took the actions because the accounts
violated its policies and represented a targeted attempt to undermine public
conversation. However, mass Twitter campaigns have continued to be on the rise.
Earlier this year, scores of social media accounts were
created supporting Saudi interests and the takeover of Newcastle United
football club.
Newcastle United fans were adding Saudi flags to their
Twitter handles, sharing memes of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and, in some
cases, making jokes about human rights abuses, in anticipation of a Saudi-led
consortium buying out the English football club.
Many of the Twitter accounts associated with the Newcastle United
posts were created only a few days prior, raising concerns that they could be
the latest example of pro-Saudi propaganda campaigns involving bot networks.
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