Do Videos Show Tsunami, Nuclear Plant Explosion in Turkey After Earthquake?
Turkey #Turkey
© Getty In this combination image, A man walks across the rubble of collapsed building towards a building still standing s in Kahramanmaras, close to the quake’s epicentre, the day after a 7.8-magnitude earthquake struck the country’s southeast, on February 7, 2023, a file photo the scene of an explosion in Beirut (Top Left) on August 4, 2020 and people watch as waves of foam and seawater crash (Bottom Left) into Three Anchor Bay in Cape Town on June 7, 2017
Horrifying scenes of the deadly 7.8 earthquake in Turkey and its immediate aftermath are depicted in hundreds of genuine and verified videos circulating on social media.
But despite the extensive (and often hard-to-watch) coverage of the natural disaster, once again misinformation agents are pouncing on the hot topic with misleading and out-of-context content, often used to stoke fear and fuel speculation.
Newsweek Misinformation Watch looked at some of the more prominent clips and viral posts, including those purporting to show a tidal wave from the quake hitting a Mediterranean coastline and a supposed “nuclear power plant” blast.
As Newsweek reported in the past, major global events and catastrophes often act as a magnet for speculation and falsehoods, not least because content sourced from conflict or disaster zones is often hard to verify before it spreads far and wide.
The devastating earthquake in southeastern Turkey, which has already taken the lives of more than 5,000 people and displaced thousands more, has been no exception, with old content decontextualized and miscaptioned to misleadingly tie it to the earthquake.
Footage of what appear to be tsunami waves hitting a coast line has been shared on Twitter, falsely linked with the Gaziantep quake.
“#Tsunami and Earthquake in Turkey. #earthquake,” a verified Twitter account CBKNEWS121 claimed in a post viewed more than 120,000 times.
Another account, which referenced CBKNEWS in the post, separately shared a clip of a huge explosion recorded from afar.
“BREAKING: Nuclear plant explode due to #Earthquake in #Turkey. Not confirmed Is this real?” the caption said.
But both videos are dated, and do not show anything related to Turkey or the megaquake that hit it on Monday, February 6.
The first clip was in fact showing a series of huge waves hitting the Durban North Beach in South Africa in March 2017, as seen in this news report from the time (timestamp 1:33). While it was not an actual tsunami but simply a freak event, part of a “cyclone swell,” the beach was briefly closed to the public because of the threat to life.
Despite multiple confirmed aftershocks following the main tremor near Gaziantep, it has not led to devastating tsunamis in the Mediterranean so far (though a small wave was reported off the coast of Cyprus). There was a tsunami warning issued by Sicily’s civil protection department after the initial M7.8 tremor hit, but it was later withdrawn.
Earthquake Devastates Turkey and Syria: What We Know So Far
SHARE
SHARE
TWEET
SHARE
What to watch next
See how rescuers are digging through rubble for missing persons in Turkey
CNN
Video shows man dragged from debris of earthquake in Malatya, Turkey
NBC News
Drone shows quake devastation in Turkey
CBS News
Wagner Group Boss Claims He Bombed Bakhmut, Challenges Zelensky To Sky Duel
Newsweek
Judge makes pivotal ruling in Alex Murdaugh murder trial
TODAY
Judge allows admission of financial evidence in Murdaugh murder trial
CBS News
Rep. Joe Neguse: We will extend an open hand to Republicans to get bipartisan work done
CNBC
Melania Trump watched the 2019 ISIS raid from the Situation Room, according to a new book
MSNBC
Watch: Rescue Efforts Continue in Syria Following Deadly Earthquakes
The Wall Street Journal
‘Safety and security’ among top issues for voters ahead of Biden’s State of the Union
NBC News
California’s reparations task force close to finishing final proposal
CBS News
House Judiciary Committee Chair Jim Jordan: Now have two standards of justice in our DOJ
CNBC
FBI foils alleged racially motivated plot to attack Baltimore’s power grid
NBC News
Rescue teams battle cold weather, dangerous conditions in Turkey and Syria
NBC News
House Speaker Kevin McCarthy: We’re stronger and more united after Speaker vote
CNBC
Officials sound alarm over rise of lithium-ion battery fires
TODAY
Click to expand
UP NEXT
The second video does not show a “nuclear plant” explosion, but rather the infamous 2020 Beirut port blast, photos and clips of which went viral on social media and were widely reported in the press at the time.
The blast, which was caused by a large amount of ammonium nitrate stored in a local port storage facility igniting, killed dozens and left hundreds wounded. The terrifying footage has since regularly resurfaced on social media, being misleadingly tied to other events, such as the Russia-Ukraine war.
Other similarly decontextualized footage has also re-emerged on the back of the tragedy in Gaziantep, such as clips of a collapsing condo in Florida or a building being demolished in Saudi Arabia in April 2022, both of which were falsely tagged as Turkey, receiving millions of views.
These examples are just a few of hundreds of misleading posts surrounding the natural disaster in Turkey, and highlight the need for a critical eye and verification when it comes to visual content relating to developing situations, from readers and journalists alike.
Related Articles
Start your unlimited Newsweek trial