Stealing photos of Somali women and exploiting them to promote political propaganda
political messages.Article Information
- Author,Mungani Ngege
- Role,BBC Worldwide Disinformation Unit
- Author,Lamis Al-Talbi and Ahmed Nour
- Role,BBC Fact Check
- Author,Paradise Hanshi
- Role,BBC African Service
- October 21, 2025
The smiling woman in the photo, wearing a blue abaya, is on X, TikTok, and Facebook, and frequently posts about how much she loves her country, Somalia.
But when the BBC contacted the person in the picture - an influencer who regularly talks about lifestyle improvement and who preferred to remain anonymous - she was shocked and said she had never seen these accounts before.
She added, "This character is not me. My images are being used, and I can't do anything to these people who are impersonating me."
She is one of several women whose images have been used without their knowledge to promote propaganda linked to Somalia, Sudan, and the United Arab Emirates. The BBC World Service's Disinformation Monitoring Unit and BBC Arabic's fact-checking team have identified more than 100 social media accounts affiliated with this network.
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UAE's activities in Somalia, and analysts believe the content is in line with the UAE's foreign policy objectives.
The United Arab Emirates has become a major player across the East African region, investing heavily in sectors such as security to counter armed extremist groups and maritime infrastructure along the strategically important Red Sea and Gulf of Aden, where Somalia is located.
The girls' profiles appear to show support for the Rapid Support Forces, one of the warring factions in the Sudanese civil war. The Sudanese army has accused the
United Arab Emirates of providing financial and military support to the Rapid Support Forces, a claim Abu Dhabi has repeatedly denied.
that between January 2023 and September 2025, a total of 47,000 posts across 111 accounts on X garnered nearly 300,000 likes and reached over 215 million users.
These accounts are typically created within minutes of each other, their usernames are swapped to avoid detection, and they rely on AI-generated graphics, synchronized hashtags, and nearly identical posts in multiple languages, which social media researchers point to as signs of coordinated and inauthentic behavior.
There are also copies of some recently created Facebook and TikTok accounts posting similar content, and while their number is small, they appear to demonstrate how the network can be tracked across social media platforms.
Who are these?
The accounts we monitored presented themselves as Somali citizens or at least residents of the country, and much of their content was devoted to praising the Somali government and celebrating the military's achievements. Their posts also extolled the beauty of Somalia's natural landscape, its people, and its cities.
The accounts used Somali clan names such as Isaaq, Ogaden, Aghoran, Dir, Digil, Darod, and Akicho as their nicknames, perhaps to help convince the Somali public that the accounts were real