China and Russia, origin of the hoaxes against Kate Middleton: the BBC comes forward

The video message in which Kate Middleton announced that she suffers from cancer and is undergoing preventive chemotherapy treatment has also been questioned and discredited by hoaxes on social networks. Fake news who return to the fray to ensure that this message is generated by Artificial Intelligence. Has been The DailyTelegraph the one that has pointed towards China, Russia and Iran as the origin of this devastating misinformation that has caused so much damage to Kensington and the Royal House. The BBC has also spoken.

From the aforementioned countries, hoaxes have been encouraged and given voice in an unusual and continuous campaign of harassment against the Princess of Wales with the aim of damaging the credibility of the palace, the Royal House and British institutions. All with the aim of destabilizing the country, as stated by the aforementioned newspaper, citing sources from Rishi Sunak’s Government. Even the prime minister himself condemned this harassment of the trolls towards the princess, who after her announcement continued to make noise on the networks re-victimizing her.

Faced with this new and incessant discredit against the Royal House, the BBC has gone out of its way to confirm the origin of Kate’s video in which she reports her illness. “BBC recorded the princess’s message in Windsor this week“, read the unpublished note. “We wish His Highness a speedy recovery.”

One of the most delicate moments of that campaign of harassment also affected Charles III, when Russian media published that the king had died suddenly. A hoax that the United Kingdom had to deny through its embassy in Moscow. By then, Carlos’s false death was already circulating on the networks.

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