A fact-checking investigation carried out by the BBC has debunked claims by some social media accounts of a purported African Christian leader labelled ‘Pastor Daniel’ who, like the biblical Daniel, miraculously tamed lions.
The man had become an internet sensation, generating interest and excitement among social media users. But revelations by the BBC have now poured cold water on the spurious claims.
According to the BBC investigation, the claims have turned out to be false after the video of the said person petting three lions had already gone viral and was widely shared online in several African countries.
In the report, the BBC described the content of the viral video, thus: the man “in a blue suit can be seen playing with the lions, at one point putting his hand inside the mouth of one of them.
“Outside the enclosure, a small crowd is watching, some filming or taking pictures. The itself is real enough and there appears to be no manipulation of the footage.”
However, the platform provided an in-depth analysis of the video, knocking out the authenticity of the claim.
“Widespread claims have spread online that he is a church pastor recreating the Biblical story of Daniel in the lions’ den in a bid to prove his powers to his followers.
“The video has been widely shared in recent days in Ghana and Nigeria, but appears to have originated in Somalia. In Kenya, a local television station has shared the video on its social media accounts.”
Further fact-checking by the BBC went thus:
“The BBC has identified the man, and he’s not a church leader. Using a reverse image search we found a news story on YouTube from 2021 filmed at a tourist park in the Somali capital, Mogadishu, in which an enclosure matched that holding the lions in the viral video.
“We were also able to determine that the man interviewed in the earlier film, named as Mohamed Abdirahman Mohamed, was the same as the one in the clip being shared across Africa in recent days.
“He is a zookeeper and has been working at the park for over eight years. The story mentioned a tourist park in Mogadishu, which by searching the name on TikTok in Somali led us to an account where the original video had been posted.
“There are other videos of Mohamed with the lions, the oldest posted in March this year. We also traced a Facebook page in the park’s name where in April, they had promoted the lions as an attraction available during Eid – the Muslim festival that marks the end of Ramadan.”