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  • A meme shared on Facebook and Twitter claims to show an image of fully stocked shelves of toilet paper, purportedly during the 2009 H1N1 outbreak, above another of barren shelves during the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. The post is misleading; the image of the stocked shelves is a screenshot from US news footage shot this year, not in 2009. "2009: H1N1 Virus," reads the text on the first photo, showing full supplies. "2020: COVID19," says the text on the photo of empty shelves. Text at the bottom reads: "Still Think The Media Doesn't Control You?" The misleading posts date to at least March 15, 2020. Screenshot of the misleading Facebook post taken March 24, 2020 The meme was shared more than 2,000 times on Facebook, including here, here, and here. It was also posted on Twitter here by a user with more than 21,000 followers, and here by a second user with nearly 5,000 followers. Screenshot of the misleading tweet, taken March 25, 2020 The image of the stocked shelves is a screenshot from footage shot for a story that aired March 13, 2020 on a South Dakota television station. Screenshot of the news story, taken March 24, 2020 Multimedia journalist Cali Montana shot the footage earlier that week in Sturgis, South Dakota for a segment reminding people not to flush cleaning products such as wipes and paper towels amid COVID-19 panic buying, Jen Blake, an executive producer in that newsroom, told AFP by email. ALSO READ: Does This Infographic Show The Correct Timeline Of the COVID-19 Symptoms? The photo in the meme is a screenshot from Montana's footage, Blake said. It does not show grocery shelves in 2009, when the H1N1 virus broke out. The lower photo is a Reuters image that depicts empty shelves in a grocery store in Sydney, Australia on March 6, 2020, according to the caption. Screenshot of the Reuters photo used in the misleading meme, taken March 25, 2020 It is estimated that there were more than 60 million cases of H1N1 (swine flu) and nearly 12,500 deaths from the disease in the US between April 2009 and April 2010, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The novel coronavirus has spread from China around the world, killing more than 700 people in the US and infecting more than 54,000. AFP Fact Check has debunked more than 180 examples of false and misleading information about the novel coronavirus. You can find the complete list of our fact-checks on the topic in English here. Follow BOOM's live blog on latest updates around the COVID-19 pandemic here. (Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by BOOM staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)
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  • English
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