Oh!

Click The second search term is 'grape juice, not blood?'.



Foreign media reports that Russia is spreading fake news about the invasion of Ukraine on a large scale.



Most of the dozens of fake news a day claim that the various horrors that occurred in Ukraine are not true.




A prime example is a photo of a Ukrainian woman drenched in blood after a Russian missile attack late last month.



A photo of a civilian woman with her face injured by shards of glass shattered in the bombardment adorned the covers of newspapers around the world as a symbol of criticism of Russia's inhumane invasion. argued that.




Posted on a pro-Putin-friendly social media platform operated in Russian, the claim has been read by more than 600,000 Russians.



In addition, fake news continues, claiming that the missile attack that killed 34 civilians was not their own but a Ukrainian missile.



Netizens responded, "Damn fake news, it's not just our country.", "If you drive my blood to be grape juice... I think the world will really hate it."