The claim shared by some social media accounts that "Documents from Al Jazeera's live broadcast show that rockets were fired at Israel and one of the rockets failed and landed on a hospital" is false.
The news article cited as the basis for the allegation mentions Israel's bombardment of Gaza. The news article has no relevance to the claims.
Immediately after Israel's bombing of the Al-Ahli Baptist Hospital in GazaHananya Naftali, the former digital media officer of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu shared a post announcing that "the Israeli Air Force has hit a hospital in Gaza".
It was determined that Naftali, who deleted the post shortly after, tried to manipulate the world public opinion by sharing posts claiming that "the missile that hit the hospital was fired from Gaza".
The account that identified itself as a journalist working for Al Jazeera and claimed that "The missile that struck the hospital was fired from Gaza" has been identified as a fake account, and it was determined that the account opened under the name "Farida Khan" had no connection with Al Jazeera and was used for manipulation purposes.
The claims made in certain media outlets that "Türkiye aids Israel by sending fruits and vegetables" are not true.
Contrary to the news reports in question, Türkiye as a nation does not provide any assistance to Israel. It is manipulation when independent businesses engaged in international trade with each other by sea in accordance with their mutual agreements are portrayed as "Türkiye provided assistance to Israel."
The official Israeli state account posted a video on the X platform at 22:42 (Turkish time), blaming Hamas for the bombing of the Al-Ahli Baptist Hospital. Despite the fact that the hospital was struck at approximately 19:27, the video shared from the account was recorded at 19:59, which constituted significant disinformation.
After realising the timing error, the Israeli account removed the video from the post at 23:04 (Turkish time).
The claim that "the missile that hit the hospital was fired from Gaza"
The claim regarding the images shared on some social media accounts that "the missile that hit the hospital was fired from Gaza" is false. It has been determined that the alleged images containing the logo of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) have been in circulation since July 8, 2022. Unfounded claims should not be given credit.
Presidency's Directorate of Communications, Centre for Combating Disinformation