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Instagram posts
Instagram posts
stated on October 1, 2024 in an Instagram post:

Video shows a missile strike on Israel.

False
By Sofia Ahmed
October 7, 2024

Video shows pyrotechnic skydivers in United Arab Emirates, not Iran’s missile strike on Israel

If your time is short

  • The Instagram video does not show Israel on Oct. 1. We found the video posted on Facebook Jan. 4, 2023, showing footage from the Dubai Marina in the United Arab Emirates.

  • Dubai’s government media office said December 2022 that mysterious lights in Dubai’s skies were caused by skydivers with pyrotechnics setting a Guinness World Record for highest-altitude skydiving firework display.

See the sources for this fact-check

Does this video of glowing objects over a city skyline show Iran’s ballistic missile strike against Israeli military targets? No, it shows skydivers in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, working to break a Guinness World Record.

The Oct. 1 Instagram video included a graphic of an Israeli flag and what sounds like an air raid siren. Some of the post’s comments said the video showed Iran’s missile attack against Israel. “GO IRAN,” one commenter said.

False embed, Iranian missiles in Israel
Figure 1: False embed, Iranian missiles in Israel

Screenshot from Instagram

The post was flagged as part of Meta’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Meta, which owns Facebook, Instagram and Threads.)

But the video has nothing to do with the nearly 200 missiles Iran fired toward Israel on Oct. 1 in response to Israel killing top Hezbollah and Hamas officials in Lebanon and Iran.

We found the video shared on Facebook Jan. 4, 2023. The Facebook video says it shows partygoers on a yacht in Dubai seeing unidentified lights around Dubai Marina.

We geolocated the video and confirmed it shows Dubai Marina, an area on the Persian Gulf in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

Dubia’s government media office posted a video Dec. 22, 2022, on X saying the mysterious lights in Dubai’s night skies were skydivers who had spent the past few weeks working with pyrotechnics to set a Guinness World Record for highest altitude skydiving firework display. The lights in the media office’s video resemble those in the Instagram post.

Guinness World Records said Skydive Dubai, in association with DAMAC Properties, a Dubai-based real estate developer, on Dec. 6, 2022, broke the record for highest-altitude skydiving fireworks display at 5,130 meters, or about 16,830 feet.

We rate the claim that a video shows an Iranian missile strike on Israel False.

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