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The Premeditated “TigrayGenocide” Cyberwarfare Against  Ethiopia in the Age of Social Media

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Ethiopian News _ Tigray Genocide Study

by GETFACTet.org

A team of scientists and data analysts at GETFACTet investigated social media data to find the  origin and trending of the hashtag that popularized the Tigray genocide narrative worldwide,  which has been playing a key part in the international community’s response to Ethiopia,  including US foreign policy.  

The data that revealed a piece of shocking information indicates that non-military actors outside  Ethiopia were coordinating #TigaryGenocide cyber campaign that is linked to the TPLF military  command preplanned military attack or “pre-emptive strike” on the Ethiopian military base. 

According to the findings, on the night of Nov 3rd and Nov 4th, 2020, 17 accounts were created,  and the first “#TigrayGenocide” tweet began on Tuesday at 19:46 from one of these accounts,  which is considered the genesis of the hashtag.  

This shows that “#TigrayGenocide” was launched before and during the attack on thousands of  Ethiopian National Defense Forces (ENDF) stationed in Tigray, many of whom were massacred  by Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) forces while they slept. “#TigrayGenocide” was 

already circulating the international social media hubs long before Ethiopian forces responded to  the attack by the TPLF that started the war and the ongoing humanitarian crisis. 

Upon closer examination of the numbers, approximately 184 additional accounts were created,  with a total of 201 accounts being created nearly the same day on Nov 4th, pushing the  “#TigrayGenocide” worldwide. This is the most significant number of accounts created to  propagate the genocide narrative within a single day (Figure 1, see the spike on Nov 4th).  

On Nov 5th, 156 additional new accounts were created, with a cumulative of 357 that started  “#TigrayGenocide” tweet. Between Nov 5th – Nov 30th of 2020, nearly 1633 cumulative new  accounts opened and reached 75,581 “#TigrayGenocide” tweets (this does not include retweets,  replays or likes). After Nov 5th, daily new account creation declined by more than 80 percent,  while the #TigrayGencoide retweets sharply increased. This indicates the first 201 accounts  created on Nov 4th were the ones driving the genocide hashtag for the consecutive months  following the beginning of the conflict. 

Figure 1. Number of newly created accounts per day that start twitting “#TigrayGenocide”  versus date.

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Figure 2. New accounts created accounts (accumulated with time) that start twitting  “#TigrayGenocide” versus date.

Tigray Genocide 5
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Figure 3. Cumulative “#TigrayGenocide” tweet versus date. 

While the “TigrayGenocide” hashtag retweets increased exponentially, there was no  communication (internet or phone) between Nov 4th to Nov 30th from the Tigray region to the  outside world.  

Why were hundreds of accounts created to spread the genocide hashtag on the day TPLF  launched its initial attack and even before Ethiopian Defense Forces were deployed to the Tigray  region to defend against the TPLF’s attack?  

As we look at these accounts deeper, we uncovered a large percentage of the accounts tweeting  “#TigrayGenocide” for the first two months were outside Ethiopia and concentrated in specific  locations such as Melbourne-Australia, Colorado-USA, Enschede-Netherland, and Islington London. 

As time progressed between January – February 2021, the same hashtag was trending with  50,000 retweets per day. A coordinated effort from non-Ethiopian individuals from Tanzania and  Kenya, with more than a million account followers, were tweeting this hashtag, giving it an  international social media voice. 

During our data mining, the “#TigrayGenocide” tweets starting from Nov 4th used the hashtag  without providing specific incidents that include the location, date, and time of a genocidal act.  This loose use of the term ‘genocide’ without confirmed evidence made this serious term a broad  statement.  

The fact that #TigrayGenocide began on the night of Nov 3-4th during the TPLF attack, during  the electric blackout, even before the Ethiopian National Defense Force (ENDF) response,  clearly shows that non-military actors outside Ethiopia were coordinating a #TigrayGenocide cyber attack with military action in Tigray. This campaign was designed to distract the  international community and shape the public perception of the actual aggression of the TPLF.  

These factual reasons raise important alarming bells for those genuinely concerned with  preventing genocides and conflicts. The intentional, premeditated and well-coordinated use of  these accounts to propagate an unconfirmed narrative of genocide should also be a call to action  for international lawyers and policymakers seeking to curb the misuse of the media to create  conditions that advance narratives of fear and hatred, which escalate conflicts to ultimately cause  the deaths and dislocation of millions based on falsehoods.

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The post The Premeditated “TigrayGenocide” Cyberwarfare Against  Ethiopia in the Age of Social Media appeared first on Borkena Ethiopian News.


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