After Assad’s removal from power, thousands of prisoners were freed from the notorious Sednaya prison. The internet is flooded with images from the “Human Slaughterhouse.” However, not all photographs are authentic.
While many are desperately searching for relatives allegedly detained in Sednaya, images and videos of freed prisoners have inundated the internet.
The suffering of people and the immediate relief for many are real, but some of the footage online is not. Certain claims have been exaggerated or fabricated. False news denies reality and obscures the clarification of crimes committed by Assad’s regime.
An image generated by artificial intelligence (AI) misrepresented as a Sednaya Prisoner went viral.
Fact check: false
The image does not depict a prisoner from Sednaya prison. A reverse image search traces it to an X-post featuring a photograph and a five-second video of a man crawling out of a hole holding a large spider. The video, posted on TikTok on December 3rd, 2024, was labeled as AI-generated content. The man’s wide-open eyes despite bright light and unnatural hand movements also indicate that the video was created using AI.
Claims of underground cells continue despite the lack of evidence
A video claims to show a young child in underground Sednaya prison cells. The one-minute clip, widely shared on TikTok and viewed over 2.7 million times, starts with a close-up of a child looking through a small opening in ruins.
Fact check: false
This footage does not originate from Sednaya prison or any related incident. Reverse image searches reveal longer versions available online, showing the child playing at home rather than being trapped under rubble.
How false claims cause harm
The issue with false claims and manipulated images related to Sednaya prison extends beyond individual cases. Alongside videos taken out of context, numerous unverified claims continue to circulate online.
One verified video shows Syrians entering the prison, briefly revealing a child. Many have shared photos of this scene, asserting it proves children are held in Sednaya.
However, it is not uncommon for small children to accompany their detained mothers in prisons. It remains unclear whether the child in the footage was among the detainees or merely accompanying civilians entering the facility.
Spreading disinformation about crimes and horrific events undermines efforts to document and investigate them, complicating the task of holding perpetrators accountable. Those responsible can exploit the confusing information landscape to deny reality. In the end, fake news weakens efforts to uncover the truth and achieve justice, Deutsche Welle writes.
Photo: DW