A video call between Berlin Mayor Franziska Giffey and a man pretending to be Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko broke off as suspicion grew he was an imposter, the Berlin Senate Chancellery said on Friday.
“There were no reference points that the video conference was not being conducted with a real person. Apparently, it is a deepfake. Police have been called in to investigate,” the chancellory wrote on Twitter.
According to Giffey’s spokeswoman, Lisa Frerichs, the first quarter of an hour of the conversation between the Berlin mayor and an imposter was completely unremarkable.
“The supposed Mr. Klitschko asked how we are doing with the many Ukrainian refugees, how we are dealing with it, what the numbers are — a completely normal conversation, as we had expected,” she said of the video call, which had been planned days in advance.
Giffey’s doubts arose when the imposter wanted to talk about Ukrainians “trying to obtain social benefits in Berlin,” Frerichs said.
“And there was a request that we might take actions through the authorities to support young men going back to Ukraine to fight,” the mayor’s spokeswoman added.
Frerichs said the last topic, on gay rights, was even more unusual: “He asked if we could support Kiev in an advisory capacity to host some kind of CSD (Christopher Street Day). That was quite strange in light of the war.”
The connection was then terminated or broken off, according to the Berlin mayor’s office account. The Berlin mayor’s administrative staff later said in a tweet that Ukraine’s ambassador to Germany, Andriy Melnyk, confirmed that Giffey had not spoken to Klitschko.
“Unfortunately, it is part of the reality that the war is being waged with all means — including online, in order to undermine trust with digital methods and to discredit Ukraine’s partners and allies,” Giffey said.
The German mass-market daily Bild contacted the Kyiv mayor, and he expressed the hope that he can talk to Giffey via official channels soon. “I don’t need a translator either,” said Klitschko, who resided in Germany for years.
Giffey thanked him on Twitter, noting that the imposter had asked to be able to speak Russian with translation because there were allegedly non-German speaking employees around him.
Frerichs said there had been no obvious indication that Giffey was not speaking to a real person, but that in retrospect the person purporting to be Klitschko was probably a “deepfake.”
“There was someone sitting across from us who looked exactly like Vitali Klitschko,” she said.
“Deepfakes” can take the form of technically sophisticated videos that appear to realistically depict speech and actions of an actual person.
dh/sms (AFP, dpa)
Article source: https://www.dw.com/en/vitali-klitschko-fake-tricks-berlin-mayor-in-video-call/a-62257289?maca=en-rss-en-all-1573-rdf