Thursday, February 16, 2023

Israeli firm sought to discredit the Red Cross in Burkina Faso, report reveals



















Issued on: 16/02/2023 - 

An Israeli firm in 2020 smeared the International Committee of the Red Cross in Burkina Faso, presumably at the request of the Burkinabe government, investigative journalists said Thursday

The report -- by a consortium of journalists led by French non-profit Forbidden Stories -- appears to add to a growing body of evidence that shadowy private firms worldwide are using hacking and social media to manipulate public opinion.

Journalists posing as potential clients met one of the two heads of Israeli influence company Percepto International, Royi Burstien, who cited Burkina Faso as a successful disinformation campaign by his company.

Although Percepto had not yet been founded at the time, "Burstien presented the case study as a significant achievement of Percepto's," it said.

Burkina Faso is in the grip of a seven-year jihadist insurgency that has claimed thousands of lives and displaced at least two million people from their homes.

In the meeting, Burstien, who says he previously served in Israel's military intelligence directorate, displayed a PowerPoint on "Limiting Prominent NGO Intervention" for an unnamed government, Forbidden Stories said.

"Our client had a real problem with a specific NGO that really was not objective... The question is, how do you... put them on the sideline?" he told them.


Former ICRC chief Peter Maurer was forced to defend the Red Cross's actions in Burkina Faso following a smear campaign orchestrated by an Israeli influence company, investigative journalists said Thursday. © Kirill Kudryavtsev, AP file photo

Based on a few clues, the reporters managed to trace the controversy's trajectory, Forbidden Stories said.

In the alleged disinformation campaign, an opinion piece appeared in French magazine Valeurs Actuelles on August 3, 2020, asking whether the ICRC was the "involuntary godfather of terrorism in Burkina Faso".

The article was circulated by Burkinabe outlets and provoked a fierce anti-ICRC controversy fed by social media, leading to fears for the safety of ICRC employees working in the country, Forbidden Stories said.

French analyst Emmanuel Dupuy, who wrote the article, told AFP he had no link with Percepto, and was unaware of its existence.

He said an adviser to the country's then-president Roch Marc Christian Kabore, Samuel Sellem, suggested he write the article, for which he was not paid.

"Everything is true in the column, I wouldn't change a comma," he said.

As the controversy grew in Burkina Faso, AFP on September 14, 2020 published a response by then ICRC head Peter Maurer, in which he said the organisation only entered into dialogue with armed groups out of humanitarian necessity.

Forbidden Stories claimed AFP "amplified" the news.

"AFP on September 14, 2020 factually reported on a press conference held by the ICRC president in Ouagadougou, according to the journalistic standards of one of the world's largest international news agencies," AFP global news director Phil Chetwynd said.

"At no prior stage had AFP reported on the contents of the Valeurs Actuelles opinion piece," he added.

Burstien seemed to interpret the results of the campaign as a success, Forbidden Stories said.

The consortium's latest report follows another published by the same group on Wednesday that another Israeli firm, dubbed "Team Jorge", sought to influence more than 30 elections around the world for clients by hacking, sabotage and spreading disinformation.

(AFP)

'Team Jorge', threat to democracy: Israeli firm meddled in more than 30 elections

Issued on: 16/02/2023 


01:47© france 24
Video by:Sam BRADPIECE

A team of contractors led by a former Israeli special forces operative has allegedly meddled in over 30 Presidential Elections over the course of two decades or so says a new investigation by French non-profit, Forbidden Stories. Working under the name ‘Team Jorge’, they used hacking and disinformation to undermine democracy across the world, including in Africa. FRANCE 24's correspondent Sam Bradpiece explains.

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