A photo of multiple armored vehicles has been shared in Chinese-language social media posts that claim the photo was taken after South Korea declared martial law on Dec. 3, 2024.
But the claim is false. The photo was published in January and shows military exercises arranged by the South Korean army to strengthen its armored division’s readiness to conduct maneuvers in an urban environment.
The photo was shared on Weibo on Dec. 3, 2024 after South Korea declared martial law.
South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol declared it to counter “threats from North Korea” and “anti-state activities” by the domestic political opposition.
According to Yoon’s declaration, martial law would begin at 11 p.m. Tuesday, but the National Assembly voted to lift the decree nearly three hours later as protesters rallied outside, which led Yoon to end it.
South Korea’s constitution allows the president to declare martial law in periods of national emergency but also stipulates that the president must comply if a majority of the National Assembly votes to lift martial law.
“Exciting! Is it real? Didn’t expect to see a coup d'état of another Korean puppet government again in my life. Wonder if Yoon Suk Yeol’s regime is orchestrating this?” the Weibo post reads.
The same photo was shared on X in English and Korean.
But the claim is false.
Old image
A reverse image search found that the same photo was originally published in a report by South Korean daily Soule Shinmun on Jan. 25, 2024.
“The 1st Security Group of the Army’s Capital Defense Command conducted a K808 White Tiger wheeled armored personnel carrier maneuver training in the downtown area of Seoul in the early morning of the 25th,” the caption of the photo reads.
The photo was credited to South Korea’s Defense Media Agency with a link to a YouTube clip published on Jan. 25.
At the 25-second mark, the clip features the exact same scene depicted in the latest photo shared on social media.
AFCL found photos of soldiers, military vehicles, and helicopters gathering around South Korea’s National Assembly following the declaration of martial law as seen here and here.
But none of them match photos shared on social media with a misleading claim.
Translated by Shen Ke. Edited by Taejun Kang.
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