Biweekly Report: Disinformation Trends and Social Media Monitoring in Ethiopia
(November 1–15, 2025)
Compiled By
MFC Team
MultiFact Check, Inc (MFC)
November 23, 2025
Addis Ababa
Executive Summary
Ethiopia’s digital environment between November 1–15, 2025
remained volatile and polarized. Social
media platforms such as Facebook, X, TikTok, and YouTube amplified unverified claims,
emotionally
charged narratives, and coordinated disinformation campaigns. Major events – including the
passing
of historian Professor Lapiso Delebo, competing military claims in Amhara and Oromia, and
escalating tensions with Eritrea – dominated online discussions. At the same time, the
confirmed
Marburg virus outbreak and opposition warnings about the 2026 election fueled widespread
debate
and heightened public anxiety.
Disinformation tactics grew more sophisticated during this period. AI‑generated images and
videos
circulated widely, fabricating evidence of military movements and migration crises. Old footage
resurfaced as “breaking news,” misleading audiences during politically sensitive moments. Health
misinformation mirrored earlier crises, with recycled COVID‑19 content repurposed as Marburg
coverage and false cures promoted online. Hate speech also intensified, targeting Ethiopia’s
Women’s
National Football Team and escalating ethnic hostility through derogatory slurs linked to
regional
disputes.
These developments underscore the urgent need for continuous monitoring and timely
fact‑checking.
False information spreads rapidly, exploiting political tension, health fears, and regional
conflict to
deepen divisions and erode trust. Strengthening digital literacy, encouraging responsible
reporting, and
promoting respectful dialogue are critical to countering these harmful narratives. Verified
institutions
and independent fact‑checking organizations remain essential in safeguarding Ethiopia’s
information
space and supporting democratic resilience.
