Image of giant rock in shipping container was taken in Malawi, not Ivory Coast
- This article is more than one year old.
- Published on December 3, 2021 at 14:28
- 2 min read
- By Segun OLAKOYENIKAN, AFP Nigeria
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The image, which shows an open container and three men in suits inspecting the cargo, appears in this Facebook post from Nigeria. It has been shared more than 400 times since publication on November 30, 2021.
“Yesterday morning at Abidjan port,” reads the caption on the photo. “They were waiting for two Toyota Corolla vehicles, bought online from Dubai (sic).”
Social media monitoring tool CrowdTangle revealed that the claim has spread to other African countries, including Kenya, Gambia and Somalia.
But the photo of the rock is unrelated to the Port of Abidjan. Rather, AFP Fact Check found it was taken in Malawi’s capital Lilongwe.
Shipment to China
A reverse image search on Google shows the photo has been circulating online since at least March 2021, accompanying several false claims ranging from dubious vaccine deliveries to Malawi to an illegal shipment from Zimbabwe to China.
But AFP Fact Check traced the photo back to the website of Malawian online media outlet Malawi24 in a report from March 26, 2021, about a rock sample destined for China.
The report further identified the three men with masks standing in front of the open shipping container as Minister of Mining Rashid Gaffar and other officials from the ministry.
Malawian daily newspaper The Daily Times reported that Gaffar was inspecting the export of the 25-tonnes of rose quartz mineral rock originally valued at two million Malawian kwacha ($111,792) following doubts over its true worth.
“I have stopped the exporting of the precious rock because I would like to investigate its true value. I hear such rocks can fetch over K170 million [$9.5 million],” the newspaper quoted Gaffar. “So, we will wait for experts to value the quality of the rock before it is sold.”
Gaffar’s spokesperson Sangwani Phiri told AFP Fact Check in March 2021 that the rock was taken from a mining site in Malawi’s northern Rumphi District and brought into the ministry’s custody for proper valuation.
“This story happened on 25th of March 2021,” Phiri said. “It was just one of those rocks whose mineral value is yet to be fully assessed by an independent evaluator.”
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