My fake news whodunnit
When a name very similar to journalist Michelle Madsenβs is used in a fake news hatchet job on a Senegalese politician, she tries to hunt down who was behind it.
When a name very similar to journalist Michelle Madsenβs was used as the cover for a fake news hatchet job on a Senegalese politician, she found herself entangled in a web of deception that she is seeking to unravel.
In the run up to Senegalβs hard-fought presidential election last year, a story surfaced accusing a candidate, Ousmane Sonko, of securing βfinancial assistanceβ from a European oil company in exchange for oil contracts. The article was attributed to a journalist called βMichelle Damsenβ.
The controversial accusations made waves in Senegal, but no "Michelle Damsen" could be found. Michelle Madsen, a British journalist who investigates big companies and corruption in Africa, received a barrage of messages trying to verify the story instead. Despite Michelle denying any involvement, and a full retraction from the website which first published the story, the allegations levelled at Mr Sonko were reported widely, accompanied by additional documents and βproofβ of bribes he denies taking.
Who wanted to smear Sonko? Who is behind βMichelle Damsenβsβ byline? Could it have been one of Michelleβs contacts? Was this part of a wider disinformation campaign in Senegalβs election? Michelle travels to Senegal to find out.
(Illustration by George Wafula /ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ African Digital)
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- Sun 14 Jun 2020 02:06GMTΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ World Service
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