Squawking bird blows the whistle on fake video trying to tilt Ecuador election
A widely shared video appeared to show Colombian guerrillas backing a candidate but an ornithologist spotted something awry
Mat Youkee
@matyoukee
Tue 9 Feb 2021 05.00 EST
An attempt to influence the Ecuadorian elections with a fake video purportedly showing leftwing guerrillas endorsing one of the candidates was thwarted by a ground-dwelling bird and a keen-eared ornithologist.
In the video, shared on social media before the elections first round on Sunday, three masked and armed men stood before the red and black flag of the ELN Colombias largest remaining guerrilla force and expressed their support for the leftist candidate Andrés Arauz.
A caption at the foot of the screen described the setting as the Colombian jungle, but a shrill whistle from somewhere in the shrub gave the game away.
I recognised the whistle instantly and I knew that the video could not have been filmed in Colombia, said Manuel Sánchez, an ornithologist and bird guide. He had identified the avian whistleblower as a pale-browed tinamou which is not native to Colombia.
Tinamous are quite primitive birds. They live on the forest floor and they dont sing; they have short, inflected whistles, said Sánchez. It was just luck that this particular species lives in a very small and rare dry forest ecosystem in western Ecuador and north-west Peru. Although the ELN have previously operated in northern Ecuador, there is no record of activity in those ecosystem areas.
Spelling mistakes, strange accents and unlikely weaponry further undermined the authenticity of the video, which emerged after the Colombian weekly magazine Semana claimed it had uncovered documents showing ELN support for Arauz. The ELN denies the claim and disavowed the video.
More:
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/feb/09/ecuador-bird-fake-video-colombian-guerrillas