Monday, November 25, 2024
Monday, November 25, 2024

HomeFact CheckDid a Gujarati daily call Narendra Modi 'biggest liar in world'?

Did a Gujarati daily call Narendra Modi ‘biggest liar in world’?

Authors

A self-taught social media maverick, Saurabh realised the power of social media early on and began following and analysing false narratives and ‘fake news’ even before he entered the field of fact-checking professionally. He is fascinated with the visual medium, technology and politics, and at Newschecker, where he leads social media strategy, he is a jack of all trades. With a burning desire to uncover the truth behind events that capture people's minds and make sense of the facts in the noisy world of social media, he fact checks misinformation in Hindi and English at Newschecker.

Several social media users shared a newspaper clipping claiming that a Gujarati daily has called Narendra Modi ‘the biggest liar in the world.’

Shilpi Singh, a former vice president of Madhya Pradesh Congress IT Cell shared a newspaper clipping claiming that ‘an honest’ Gujarati daily has called Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi the biggest liar in the world. Several other social media users also shared this viral image.

https://twitter.com/keval__nagda/status/1338507298461810691

https://www.facebook.com/raakeshkumar.tyagi.5/posts/1555338931338171
https://www.facebook.com/pawan.jagtap794/posts/3435349809847376
https://www.facebook.com/dmsurjan/posts/3498651030170437

More such claims can be viewed here.

Fact Check/Verification

We did a reverse image search of the viral image on Google but did not find any reliable information in this process except old claims around the same viral image.

https://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=2045004532438938&id=1865961603676566

We also searched Google with several combinations of different keywords in English, Hindi and Gujarati but did not get any media report that could establish the claims made in the aforementioned tweet.

Our Gujarati fact-checker also informed us that there is a spelling mistake in Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s name that is ‘નરેન્દ્ર મોદી’ but incorrectly typed ‘નરેનદર મોદી’. He also pointed out that the kind of language used in the viral clip is unparliamentary, and very unlikely to be used by any prominent and responsible media organization.

Continuing our search, we also performed a reverse image search on Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s image that is used in the viral clipping. This led us to a 2013 article published by India Today.

https://www.indiatoday.in/elections/story/narendra-modi-bjp-rally-bangalore-karnataka-217686-2013-11-16

We also searched Google for any such survey or study that could back the claims made in the viral post but we did not find anything related to it.

Conclusion

The viral clipping that is doing the rounds on social media is ‘fake’ and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has not been called ‘No. 1 or biggest liar in the world’ by a Gujarati daily.


Result: False

Sources

Analysis

Google Search

If you would like us to fact check a claim, give feedback or lodge a complaint, WhatsApp us at 9999499044 or email us at checkthis@newschecker.in. You can also visit the Contact Us page and fill the form.

Authors

A self-taught social media maverick, Saurabh realised the power of social media early on and began following and analysing false narratives and ‘fake news’ even before he entered the field of fact-checking professionally. He is fascinated with the visual medium, technology and politics, and at Newschecker, where he leads social media strategy, he is a jack of all trades. With a burning desire to uncover the truth behind events that capture people's minds and make sense of the facts in the noisy world of social media, he fact checks misinformation in Hindi and English at Newschecker.

Saurabh Pandey
A self-taught social media maverick, Saurabh realised the power of social media early on and began following and analysing false narratives and ‘fake news’ even before he entered the field of fact-checking professionally. He is fascinated with the visual medium, technology and politics, and at Newschecker, where he leads social media strategy, he is a jack of all trades. With a burning desire to uncover the truth behind events that capture people's minds and make sense of the facts in the noisy world of social media, he fact checks misinformation in Hindi and English at Newschecker.

Most Popular