An article titled "These cities will be under curfew from Monday at 20:00 PM" was published by the dubious portal "specialja.com".
This article turns out to have a made-up title, which does not correspond to the content.
The article contains the announcement from the National Institute of Public Health in Kosovo (NIPHK) dated March 5, 2021, which announced the number of positive cases of COVID-19, the number of recoveries and those who have lost their lives.
So, there is no recent decision to introduce new anti-covid measures to restore the curfew, as falsely claimed in the title of this article published by the dubious portal "specialja.com".
Text of the article published by "specialja.com":
These cities will be under curfew from Monday at 20:00 PM
The National Institute of Public Health in Kosovo has announced that 7 people have died in the past 24 hours as a result of the infection. / Open 5 sec marketing continue EXCLUSIVE VIEWS. According to the announcement, 564 people have tested positive during this time. In the last 24 hours, 380 citizens have also recovered. / Open 5 sec marketing continue EXCLUSIVE VIEWS
Link to the article published on "specialja.com":
Below you can find the 24-hour report dated March 5 from the IKSHPK, which was used in the article by the dubious portal "specialja.com".
https://www.facebook.com/IKSHPK/posts/3542166365911342
Analyze:
"Specialja.com" received the 24-hour report from the National Institute of Public Health with the number of recovered, infected and those who have lost their lives as a result of the Corona virus, which it then published by giving it a false title in order to attract readers to click on it.
After fact-checking by hibrid.info, it turns out that this article is considered "misinformation" and "clickbait".
Reasoning:
A “Disinformation” rating is given to media reporting that contains a “mix” of inaccurate sources or even half-truthful content. This rating will also address reports that have incorrect attributions or headlines that do not reflect the text in terms of information accuracy.
The assessment as "Clickbait" is given to those texts whose title has no basis in the content of the following text. Such texts and articles aim to attract the attention of the reader or even the consumer with a sensational title by promising content that does not actually exist and are created mainly out of financial interest, that is, due to increased readability. So, this type of text is intended only to click, which can be converted into a profit for the content producer.