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How Fake AI Videos, Photos Are Making Captain Ibrahim Traore Popular

Viral campaigns combining propaganda and AI content are being amplified by activists and English-speaking influencers — particularly those criticising Langley while celebrating Traoré.

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Burkina Faso junta leader Captain Ibrahim Traore [Courtesy]

If viral videos online are to be believed, R. Kelly and Pope Leo XIV agree on one thing; that Burkina Faso’s junta leader, Captain Ibrahim Traoré, is a remarkable head of state.

The images, however, are artificial intelligence-generated propaganda, part of what experts describe as an extensive disinformation campaign designed to bolster the “personality cult” of the West African strongman.

Beyoncé and Justin Bieber are among other celebrities whose faces and voices have been digitally manipulated using AI to sing the praises of Traoré.

In one such video, attributed to disgraced R&B singer R. Kelly, the AI-generated lyrics glorify Traoré, who seized power in a 2022 coup, saying: “For the love of his people, he risked it all… bullets fly but he don’t fall… he’s fighting for peace in his motherland.”

American singer & songwriter R Kelly [Courtesy/Getty Images]

American singer & songwriter R Kelly [Courtesy/Getty Images]

Kelly is currently serving a 30-year prison sentence in the United States for crimes including the sexual trafficking of minors, yet the song — produced entirely using AI — has amassed over two million views since its release in May.

The doctored content has been widely circulated across West African social media platforms.

This phenomenon emerges in the wake of a series of military coups in Burkina Faso, Mali, Niger, and Guinea, with the region already grappling with growing instability fuelled by jihadist violence.

“These are influence and disinformation campaigns aimed at extending Captain Traoré’s personality cult into Burkina Faso’s English-speaking neighbours,” said an American researcher who requested anonymity.

Pledge of Control

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After taking power in September 2022, Traoré vowed to swiftly restore control in Burkina Faso, which continues to suffer from jihadist attacks linked to both Al-Qaeda and Islamic State.

Nearly three years on, such attacks persist — and have even intensified — claiming thousands of lives.

In the meantime, several military officers accused of plotting coups have been arrested. Alleged comments by former US Africa Command head General Michael Langley, claiming Traoré was using Burkina Faso’s gold reserves for personal protection, triggered widespread public outrage and protests.

Soldiers loyal to Burkina Faso junta leader Capt. Ibrahim Traoré gather outside the National Assembly in Ouagadougou [Courtesy/AP]

Soldiers loyal to Burkina Faso junta leader Capt. Ibrahim Traoré gather outside the National Assembly in Ouagadougou [Courtesy/AP]

It was around this period that a surge of AI-generated videos glorifying Traoré began flooding social media.

“Information manipulation has become a strategic tool for maintaining power and legitimising the junta’s rule,” said a Burkinabè specialist in strategic communication, who spoke anonymously for safety reasons.

A ‘Digital Army’

Viral campaigns combining propaganda and AI content are being amplified by activists and English-speaking influencers — particularly those criticising Langley while celebrating Traoré.

Some appear to be capitalising on the trend for financial gain, while others are reportedly affiliated with the junta’s cyber propaganda unit, known as the Rapid Communication Intervention Battalions (BIR-C), the Burkinabè expert noted.

“They truly operate like a digital army,” the source explained, adding that the unit is led by a US-based activist, Ibrahima Maïga, and asserting there are no direct ties to Russian actors.

Nevertheless, the group’s anti-imperialist messaging — portraying Captain Traoré as a saviour of Burkina Faso and the African continent against Western neo-colonialism — aligns with Russian interests and is consequently amplified by Russian networks.

Russia's President Vladimir Putin shakes hands with Burkina Faso's interim President Ibrahim Traore at a past meeting [Courtesy/Reuters]

Russia’s President Vladimir Putin shakes hands with Burkina Faso’s interim President Ibrahim Traore at a past meeting [Courtesy/Reuters]

Russian Connections

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According to the American researcher, “some reports have indeed identified Russian connections behind the recent escalation in disinformation efforts”, particularly those targeting English-speaking countries like Ghana and Nigeria.

“Destabilising Nigeria could have far-reaching effects across the region,” he warned.

Nigerian journalist Philip Obaji, who specialises in Russian influence campaigns, agreed, stating that media outlets in Burkina Faso and Togo have allegedly accepted payments from agents tied to Russia to disseminate such propaganda.

Meanwhile, the Burkinabè junta has expelled foreign journalists from the country, while domestic media outlets increasingly self-censor for fear of arrest — or, in some cases, forced deployment to the frontlines of the conflict against jihadists.

Although some within the Burkinabè diaspora have sought to challenge the junta’s narrative — including by amplifying reports of jihadist activity — commenting on or sharing such posts is deemed to constitute glorification of terrorism, a crime punishable by between one and five years in prison.

(AFP)


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