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June 17, 2009

Iran Photoshopping: Newspaper Clones Crowd Photo (Updated)

Iranphotoshopped

The Daily Kos blog has posted this image, from an unidentified source in Iran, showing a newspaper's depiction of a demonstration in support of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. As you can see, elements of the crowd have been cloned, evidently to fill gaps and make the rally seem larger.

This looks like a textbook-worthy example of information manipulation, but there's still a lot we don't know about this photo. When was it shot? Who shot and distributed it? Who altered it? When was this page published? And what is this newspaper?

UPDATE: Two readers who read Farsi have helped us out with the translation. "Its a hardline paper and some of the heading is missing or covered," one says. The sentence that's partly visible reads: "The unrivaled attendance of people in the election..." Another reader offers this translation: "Unprecedented millions of people are going to finish the job..."

Despite the alterations to this particular image, we've seen legitimate news sources publishing photographs of large pro-Ahmadinejad rallies this week. Ahmadinejad was the official winner of the recent Iranian election, though supporters of opposition candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi have assembled in massive crowds in recent days to contest the results. Several people have been reported killed in clashes between authorities and opposition protesters.

From yesterday: Iran Bans Foreign Media
From Monday: Iran Protest Photos Key To Twitter Coverage
Background: In July 2008, Iran's official state media doctored a photo of a missile launch.

Comments

Note: PDNPulse comments close automatically after two weeks.

Dont trust the media or at least be very careful then reading.
Thanks for the article!

The comments to this entry are closed.

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