Misinformation thrives in Iraq’s virtual battlegrounds

Iraqis demonstrate in Tahrir Square in Baghdad on May 25, 2021, to demand accountability for a recent wave of killings targeting activists. (File/AFP)
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Updated 29 May 2021
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Misinformation thrives in Iraq’s virtual battlegrounds

  • Misinformation about political, social, security and economic issues abound online in the country, said an official from the Tech 4 Peace collective
  • The Tech 4 Peace official said that Facebook is “the main vehicle for false news in Iraq,” and that there is a new trending fake story “almost daily”

BAGHDAD: Conspiracy theories, fake reports and mudslinging — in Iraq, false news thrives and risks real-life consequences as authorities struggle to counteract its spread.
Misinformation about political, social, security and economic issues abound online in the country, said an official from the Tech 4 Peace collective, an Iraqi organization that tracks “fake news.”
“There are hundreds of pages circulating false information on Facebook and Twitter,” the official told AFP.
“Iraq has become a virtual battleground of fake news” both in local politics and between major international players vying for influence in the tinderbox country, the official said.
“And it is a free for all.”
The official pointed to an incident that happened in January as tense relations between Saudi Arabia and Iraq were easing with the opening of a border crossing between the neighbors.
Radical groups loyal to Iran — regional rival of Saudi Arabia and heavyweight in Iraq — launched a campaign on social media accusing a Saudi national of carrying out a double suicide attack in Baghdad that killed 32 people.
His picture was published on Twitter and Facebook and widely shared, even though it was revealed that he had in fact blown himself up in a rare suicide attack in Saudi Arabia in 2015.
The Daesh group eventually claimed the Baghdad bombing.
In the restive country that has seen almost two decades of conflict and crisis, concerns over the impact of misinformation prompted the authorities to set up a “surveillance service” tasked with tracking information.
Staff from the interior ministry spend hours in an office full of computer and television screens monitoring endless streams of news on television and online.
“When a piece of information seems suspect, they raise the alarm” and an investigation is carried out to confirm or debunk the news, said General Nebras Mohammad, who heads the misinformation department, which includes the surveillance service.
About 25 million Iraqis use social media, according to DataReportal figures, but only 34,000 of them follow the surveillance service Facebook page, where debunked false news is posted.
The Tech 4 Peace official said that Facebook is “the main vehicle for false news in Iraq,” and that there is a new trending fake story “almost daily.”
Some of it is ultimately harmless, like recent widely shared posts claiming a young man from Mosul had married four girls in one day that was shown by Tech 4 Peace to be a promotion for a beauty salon.
But some cases are more insidious, such as using a blaze at a Covid-19 hospital in Baghdad in late April that killed 82 people to garner likes and follows by posting fabricated reports of more fires at other health centers.
Sometimes misinformation takes on a more political slant, stirring up still latent sectarian tensions in the country.
“These are organized campaigns of thousands of pages, mainly via Twitter, with political objectives,” led by both pro-Iranian factions and their opponents, the Tech 4 Peace official said.
“Millions of dollars are spent” on this, the official added.
In late August 2020, a rumor spread online that a man from the Sunni-majority city of Tikrit had been arrested with a car loaded with explosives in the Shiite-majority south.
Another version of events claimed the man was a member of the powerful Hashed Al-Shaabi state-sponsored paramilitary coalition made up of Iran-backed groups.
Both stories were untrue but the heated sectarian rhetoric they sparked was very real.
Authorities said that while the man was arrested for having a car full of explosives, he had no political motives or affiliations.
Amid the expanding sea of misinformation, authorities have raised concerns over its impact in the lead up to general elections set for October, around which rumors are already swirling online.
Mohammad said the anti-“fake news” team has stepped up grassroots campaigns that include distributing leaflets and raising awareness of the legal consequences of spreading false information.
But the campaigns are in an uphill battle in a country where under dictator Saddam Hussein, the only source of news was state-run.
Many young plugged-in Iraqis, like 24-year-old student Abdullah, take it upon themselves to verify their sources of information.
“I don’t trust news that I read at first glance, I first check the source, whether it’s from the government or elsewhere,” he told AFP at a Baghdad cafe.
Laws that criminalize the spread of false information have not been updated since 1969.
A new draft cybercrimes law is under consideration by parliament, but it has already come under fire from rights groups, including Human Rights Watch, which said it “could be used to stifle free expression.”


WEF report spotlights real-world AI adoption across industries

Updated 19 January 2026
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WEF report spotlights real-world AI adoption across industries

DUBAI: A new report by the World Economic Forum, released Monday, highlights companies across more than 30 countries and 20 industries that are using artificial intelligence to deliver real-world impact.

Developed in partnership with Accenture, “Proof over Promise: Insights on Real-World AI Adoption from 2025 MINDS Organizations” draws on insights from two cohorts of MINDS (Meaningful, Intelligent, Novel, Deployable Solutions), a WEF initiative focused on AI solutions that have moved beyond pilot phases to deliver measurable performance gains.

As part of its AI Global Alliance, the WEF launched the MINDS program in 2025, announcing its first cohort that year and a second cohort this week. Cohorts are selected through an evaluation process led by the WEF’s Impact Council — an independent group of experts — with applications open to public- and private-sector organizations across industries.

The report found a widening gap between organizations that have successfully scaled AI and those still struggling, while underscoring how this divide can be bridged through real-world case studies.

Based on these case studies and interviews with selected MINDS organizations, the report identified five key insights distinguishing successful AI adopters from others.

It found that leading organizations are moving away from isolated, tactical uses of AI and instead embedding it as a strategic, enterprise-wide capability.

The second insight centers on people, with AI increasingly designed to complement human expertise through closer collaboration, rather than replace it.

The other insights focus on the systems needed to scale AI effectively, including strengthening data foundations and strategic data sources, as well as moving away from fragmented technologies toward unified AI platforms.

Lastly, the report underscores the need for responsible AI, with organizations strengthening governance, safeguards and human oversight as automated decision-making becomes more widespread.

Stephan Mergenthaler, managing director and chief technology officer at the WEF, said: “AI offers extraordinary potential, yet many organizations remain unsure about how to realize it.

“The selected use cases show what is possible when ambition is translated into operational transformation and our new report provides a practical guide to help others follow the path these leaders have set.”

Among the examples cited in the report is a pilot led by the Saudi Ministry of Health in partnership with AmplifAI, which used AI-enabled thermal imaging to support early detection of diabetic foot conditions.

The initiative reduced clinician time by up to 90 percent, cut treatment costs by as much as 80 percent, and delivered a 10 time increase in screening capacity. Following clinical trials, the solution has been approved by regulatory authorities in Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain.

The report also points to work by Fujitsu, which deployed AI across its supply chain to improve inventory management. The rollout helped cut inventory-related costs by $15 million, reduce excess stock by $20 million and halve operational headcount.

In India, Tech Mahindra scaled multilingual large language models capable of handling 3.8 million monthly queries with 92 percent accuracy, enabling more inclusive access to digital services across markets in the Global South.

“Trusted, advanced AI can transform businesses, but it requires organizing data and processes to achieve the best of technology and — this is key — it also requires human ingenuity to maximize returns on AI investments,” said Manish Sharma, chief strategy and services officer at Accenture.