-
Kenya's economy faces climate change risks: World Bank
-
Israel says hit Iran nuclear site: Latest developments in Middle East war
-
Judge rules Trump cannot halt New York traffic congestion pricing
-
Iran war threatens Trump fight with inflation
-
Merz seeks early end to Iran war in Trump meeting
-
Germany's Merz meets Trump for talks eclipsed by Iran war
-
Mideast war threatens to spark world energy crisis
-
Iran steps up attacks on Mideast economy in response to US-Israeli strikes
-
UK cuts 2026 growth forecast, flags Iran war risk
-
'Peaky Blinders' stars hit Brum red carpet for movie premiere
-
Drones hit US embassy as vengeful Iran targets Mideast cities
-
Oil extends gains and stocks dive as Middle East war spreads
-
Warming El Nino may return later this year: UN
-
Trump hosts Germany's Merz for talks eclipsed by Mideast war
-
Second-hand phones surf rising green consumer wave
-
AI disinformation turns Nepal polls into 'digital battleground'
-
China's overstretched healthcare looks to AI boom
-
Oil extends gains and stocks drop as Iran conflict spreads
-
Strait of Hormuz impasse squeezes world shipping
-
Oscar-nominated docs take on hot-button US social issues
-
'I couldn't breathe': The dark side of Bolivia's silver boom
-
OMP Unveils Decision-Centric Planning to Accelerate Supply Chain Decision Velocity
-
Middle East war puts shipping firms in tight insurance spot
-
Mideast war risks sending global economy into stagflation
-
Iran war spreads with strikes across Middle East and beyond
-
Energy prices soar, stock markets slide on Iran war fallout
-
'No indication' Iran nuclear installations hit: IAEA
-
Showdown looms between Tesla and German union
-
France arrests activists blocking ship over alleged Russia uranium links
-
Tech sovereignty and AI networks set to dominate mobile meet
-
Canada and India strike agreements on rare earth, uranium
-
List of key Actor Award winners
-
UK toughens asylum rules to discourage migration
-
Crude soars, stocks drop after US strikes on Iran
-
Recognition, not competition, for Oscar-nominated foreign filmmakers
-
Affiliate of Pacific Avenue Capital Partners to Acquire Care.com from IAC
-
Maersk suspends vessel transit through Strait of Hormuz
-
EU warns against long war, urges 'credible transition' in Iran
-
Flights of fancy at Bottega Veneta, atmospheric mood at Armani in Milan
-
Iran launches fresh strikes across Gulf after vowing revenge for slain leader
-
OPEC+ hikes oil production by more than expected following outbreak of Iran war
-
'One Battle After Another' wins top producer award before Oscars
-
3D tool Unreal Engine makes real impact in creative industries
-
OPEC+ mulls oil production increase in shadow of war
-
Will Oscars be 17th time lucky for songwriter Diane Warren?
-
Trump says Khamenei is dead after Israel, US attack Iran
-
Vietnam AI law takes effect, first in Southeast Asia
-
US and Israel launch strikes on Iran, explosions reported across region
-
New 'Wuthering Heights' film unleashes fresh wave of Bronte-mania
-
OpenAI strikes Pentagon deal with 'safeguards' as Trump dumps Anthropic
AI disinformation turns Nepal polls into 'digital battleground'
Slick AI-generated disinformation has flooded election campaigns in Nepal, which votes Thursday in the first polls since deadly protests triggered by a brief ban on social media overthrew the government.
The September 2025 protests were driven by tech-savvy youth angry at job shortages and flagrant corruption by an ageing political elite.
Now parties across the political divide are tapping social media to push their agendas and woo voters, especially the young, including a surge of people registering to cast their ballot for the first time.
But some of the content is manipulated or outright fake, experts and fact-checkers say.
"In a country where digital literacy is low, people believe what they see," said Deepak Adhikari, editor of the independent NepalCheck team.
Kathmandu-based technology policy researcher Samik Kharel described a "digital battleground" in the run-up to the landmark vote, warning that Nepal lacked the expertise to monitor the onslaught of machine-generated content.
"It is even hard for experts to figure out what is real and fake," Kharel told AFP.
Around 80 percent of all of Nepal's internet traffic is through social media platforms, he said.
Internet analytics site DataReportal estimates more than 56 percent of Nepal's 30 million people are online, including 14.8 million Facebook users and around 4.3 million on Instagram. About 2.2 million are on TikTok, according to the Internet Service Providers' Association of Nepal.
"Disinformation remains a top concern that could undermine the integrity of the election process," said Ammaarah Nilafdeen of the US-based Center for the Study of Organized Hate.
"Nepal... is grappling with the scale of the threat that disinformation poses to society and democracy at large."
- Threat to democracy -
The protests last year began after the government moved to regulate social media, briefly banning at least 26 platforms, including Facebook, Instagram, YouTube and X.
At least 77 people were killed in two days of unrest, parliament was set on fire, and the government of four-time prime minister KP Sharma Oli collapsed.
Activists used the group-chat app Discord to put forward their suggestion of interim leader -- and days later their choice, 73-year-old former chief justice Sushila Karki, was appointed to lead the country to elections.
Social media is playing a key role again.
Loyalists of the ousted premier's Marxist party have shared AI-generated images purporting to be drone photographs of a massive gathering -- which were then reposted by top leaders, boasting a sea of more than 500,000 supporters.
Analysis by Nepali online fact-check experts TechPana found the images had been created using OpenAI's ChatGPT, while police said less than 5,000 people were at the real event.
Another AI-generated video that circulated on TikTok purported to show Gagan Thapa, leader of the Nepali Congress party, urging voters to back a rival party. The platform has removed the video.
In neighbouring India, posts calling to restore Nepal's deposed Hindu monarchy have made the rounds on social media, said researcher Nilafdeen.
Such "ideological pushes" online -- in this case "amplified by Hindu far-right supporters in India" -- stand in contrast to "domestic demands for strengthening democratic institutions", she told AFP.
- Misinformation race -
The Election Commission says there is widespread use of hate speech and deepfake content, including videos created with readily available artificial intelligence tools purporting to show candidates insulting opponents or using obscene language.
"It is a concerning issue," commission information officer Suman Ghimire said.
More than 600 cases have been passed on to the authorities, he added, with around 150 handled by police.
In one case, police detained a pro-royalist supporter, Durga Prasai, for social media posts allegedly meant to intimidate potential voters.
The Election Commission can impose fines or bar candidates from running, but experts say the sheer scale of disinformation and hate speech online outstrips any effective response.
"Candidates and people close to political parties not only compete to win, but also compete to spread misinformation," said Basanta Basnet, editor-in-chief of news website Onlinekhabar, which has collaborated with Nepal FactCheck to verify posts.
The organisation has warned that "misinformation encourages citizens to take wrong decisions", which in turn could undermine the "foundation of democracy".
L.Peeters--CPN