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AFP

Was The Ivaylovgrad Dam Flooded By Bulgaria To Keep Migrants Away?

The Bulgarian government branded the claims as "fake news" and official water levels and satellite images confirm that the event never happened

By - AFP | 18 March 2020 5:04 AM GMT


Articles and social media posts circulating online claim Bulgarian authorities flooded a dam to stop migrants crossing into Greece. However, the Bulgarian government branded the claims "fake news" and official water levels and satellite images confirm the event never happened.he Bulgarian government branded the claims "fake news" and official water levels and satellite images confirm the event never happened.

"Bulgaria 'floods' river to prevent migrants from entering Europe", reads an article by conservative US news site National File, shared more than 600 times on Facebook.

It claims Bulgarian authorities "deliberately" flooded the Ivaylovgrad dam near the Turkish-Greek border "to make crossing conditions harder for migrants wishing to gain access to the EU".

News sites in France, Greece and Slovakia also reported the claims.

A screenshot of the claims published in an article, taken on March 13, 2020

The story was widely shared on social media, including on Facebook pages supporting far right groups, such as the anti-Islamic Pegida movement (here, here and here).

Many Facebook users commenting on the posts expressed anti-immigrant sentiment.

Comments on a Facebook post sharing the claims, taken on March 13, 2020

The Ivaylovgrad dam is around 30 kilometres from the Turkish-Greek border, where thousands of migrants have arrived since Turkey's government announced last month that the country -- a non-EU member -- would no longer stop migrants from trying to cross through to Europe.

Full View

Contacted by AFP, Ivan Dimov, an advisor to Bulgaria's foreign minister Ekaterina Zaharieva, denounced the claims. "Bulgaria was not asked by Greece to flood the Ivaylovgrad dam", he said.

Environment Minister Emil Dimitrov told Bulgarian TV channel bTV the reports were "fake news".

"Nobody has allowed such a thing," he said. "Every month, I sign a plan on water use for the 52 major dams in the country" which is "valid through the following month".

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Old photo

Many articles and social media posts purport to show a photograph of water crashing down from the dam, but AFP traced the image and found it has been circulating online since at least 2015 (see here).

A screenshot of a tweet sharing the claims, taken on March 13, 2020

The image used in the tweet below is a screenshot of a video published on a Greek site in July 2018.

Screenshots of a tweet sharing the false claim and a video from 2018, taken on March 12, 2020
 

The environment and water ministry's water level measures show that the Ivaylovgrad dam was not overflowing at the time it was allegedly flooded. The misleading news articles claim the dam was opened on March 9, but official reports show there was only a slight increase in water levels at that time.

A few days before the alleged flooding on March 6, the dam was 76.13% full, and rose slightly to 76.68% capacity on March 10.

Satellite images from March 8 and 11 -- the days before and after the dam was supposedly opened -- also show that the dam was not overflowing at the time the claims surfaced.

A small sand bank near the dam and situated 1.5 kilometres from the Turkish-Greek border is still visible on both days, though slightly less on March 11. However, an AFP photographer on the ground reported heavy rainfall at the time.

Satellite images from Sentinel Hub showing water levels at the time the dam was allegedly flooded

Full View

Older satellite images show that the sand bank shrank in a more significant manner between March 6 and March 8, and that this sand bank varies regularly -- and greatly -- depending on the river's levels.

Environment Minister Emil Dimitrov told Bulgarian TV that opening the Ivaylovgrad dam would lead to a rise in water levels lasting only a few hours. He said he did not think such a rise would prevent migrants from crossing the river.

Greece could have flooded a dam it owns, also situated on the Arda river, without help from Bulgaria, he said.

AFP contacted the Greek government for comment but has not yet received a reply. 

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by BOOM staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)