Altered

As campaign season for upcoming Philippines mid-terms began, an altered Facebook post by local media outlet Rappler purportedly about one candidate’s support for impeaching Vice President Sara Duterte circulated online. Joyleen Balaba, who is seeking re-election in an area with strong support for the Duterte family, has in fact spoken against removing the vice president.

The screenshot of the purported Rappler Facebook post was shared on the same platform on March 20. It features a link to a supposed Rappler article with an image of Balaba with Sara Duterte as the thumbnail.

The post appears to read: “Joyleen Mercedes ‘Girlie’ Balaba, a Cagayan de Oro city councilor, says ‘I am happy about the impeachment of Vice President Sara Duterte because she is the one who has been interrupting my relationship with Digong’.”

Digong is the popular nickname for former president Rodrigo Duterte.

The post began circulating on Facebook on February 7, a day after the Philippines’ House of Representatives voted to impeach his daughter, Sara, charging her with “violation of the constitution, betrayal of public trust, graft and corruption, and other high crimes” (archived link). 

Balaba is vying for re-election to a councilor seat in Cagayan de Oro city under Duterte’s PDP Laban in upcoming May mid-term elections that will determine 12 Senate seats and thousands of smaller positions across the archipelago nation of 117 million (archived link). 

Social media users appeared to be duped by the altered Rappler Facebook post.

“It’s election season, politicians have become two-faced again,” read one comment. 

“Rappler is such a fake news peddler”, another said. 

Balaba has in fact defended Sara Duterte after her impeachment, according to Philippines media reports (archived links here and here).

Keyword searches of Rappler’s verified Facebook page shows an article featuring the photo of Balaba and Duterte was shared twice, on September 24 and 25, 2021 (archived links herehere and here). 

Read the full story on AFP Fact Check.

AFP launched its digital verification service in France in 2017 and has grown to become the leading global fact-checking organisation, with dedicated journalists in countries from the United States to the Philippines. Our journalists monitor online content in local languages. They take into account local cultures, languages and politics and work with AFP’s bureaus worldwide to investigate and disprove false information, focusing on items that can be harmful, impactful and manipulative.