Viral Facebook post uses old images to falsely claim it’s the October migrant caravan


migrant caravan 2 oct 21
Central American migrants walking to the U.S. start their day departing Ciudad Hidalgo, Mexico, Sunday, Oct. 21, 2018. (AP Photo/Moises Castillo)

A post on a Facebook group called “Drain the Swamp” uses old images to falsely claim that they show migrants currently traveling in a caravan toward the United States.

“They don’t want you to see this… THEY ARE NOT WALKING!! Why are the reporters hiding the fact that the migrants are coming on trains, buses, and trucks? These are not Mexican buses…,” said an Oct. 22 post that’s been shared more than 85,000 times.

One of the images shows dozens of men on top of a train and the other shows more than a dozen people scattered outside coach buses. None of those photos accurately depict the current caravan but are actually from 2013 and earlier this year.

This post was flagged as part of Facebook’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Facebook.)

The photo of men atop a train was taken by Eduardo Verdugo for the Associated Press in April 2013 to illustrate the risks some migrants take to get to the United States. A photo slideshow — which includes an image being shared now — said migrants riding on top of trains became vulnerable targets for kidnapping gangs, cartel operatives and corrupt Mexican officials.

The other image of people outside coach buses is credited to Jose Castanares and taken for AFP/Getty Images in April of this year, when another migrant caravan was enroute to the United States. A caption for that photo says the caravan of migrants was in Mexico and that it began breaking up “after abandoning its plan to travel en masse to the United States.”

News reports in April did say some migrants were traveling in buses to the Mexico-U.S. border.

“While political pressure over the caravan mounted north of the border, in Mexico the migrants continued their journey. … Sometimes they stowed away aboard freight trains. Sometimes they rode chartered buses. Sometimes they walked, carrying crosses and protest signs,” CNN reported about the April caravan.

This time around, some migrants in the caravan are also coming in trucks and other vehicles, but most of them appear to be walking. This also isn’t something reporters are hiding — there are plenty of pictures and videos documenting their travel.

Our ruling

Viral images posted on a Facebook group claim to show migrants on trains and buses heading toward the United States, not walking. The photos shared to support the claim are from 2013 and from April, and do not show the current caravan. There are some people in the current caravan traveling in trucks, but photos show that most are on foot.

We rate the post as False.

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PolitiFact rating logo PolitiFact Rating:

False

Says images show migrants on trains and buses heading toward the United States, not walking.
in a Facebook post
Monday, October 22, 2018

By
Miriam Valverde
Assistant managing editor
October 24, 2018

Truth-o-meter Ruling

False

Statement

Says images show migrants on trains and buses heading toward the United States, not walking.

Context

a Facebook post

Speaker/Target

Speaker: Viral image

Statement Date

October 22, 2018
Our Sources

Facebook, post on Drain the Swan public group, Oct. 22, 2018

The Washington Post, Braving Mexico’s rails for a ride to the United States, April 29, 2013

Getty Images photo from April 6, 2018

CNN, Undeterred by Trump, caravan buses arrive in border city, April 24, 2018

The Atlantic, Photos of the Central American Immigrant Caravan, Oct. 22, 2018

GettyImages.com, Photos of migrant caravan

Translations

Language: en

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